Home
Croucher Institute: Heavy Metals and E-Waste PDF Print E-mail
The recycling of printed circuit boards in Guiyu, China, a village intensely involved in e-waste processing, may present a significant environmental and human health risk.

Anna O. W. Leung, Nurdan S. Duzgoren-Aydin, K. C. Cheung, and Ming H. Wong

Croucher Institute for Environmental Sciences, and Department of Biology, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, PR China, and Department of Earth Sciences, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, PR China

Received for review July 27, 2007

Revised manuscript received December 27, 2007

Accepted January 5, 2008


Abstract:

The recycling of printed circuit boards in Guiyu, China, a village intensely involved in e-waste processing, may present a significant environmental and human health risk. To evaluate the extent of heavy metals (Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn) contamination from printed circuit board recycling, surface dust samples were collected from recycling workshops, adjacent roads, a schoolyard, and an outdoor food market. ICP-OES analyses revealed elevated mean concentrations in workshop dust (Pb 110 000, Cu 8360, Zn 4420, and Ni 1500 mg/kg) and in dust of adjacent roads (Pb 22 600, Cu 6170, Zn 2370, and Ni 304 mg/kg). Lead and Cu in road dust were 330 and 106, and 371 and 155 times higher, respectively, than non e-waste sites located 8 and 30 km away. Levels at the schoolyard and food market showed that public places were adversely impacted. Risk assessment predicted that Pb and Cu originating from circuit board recycling have the potential to pose serious health risks to workers and local residents of Guiyu, especially children, and warrants an urgent investigation into heavy metal related health impacts. The potential environmental and human health consequences due to uncontrolled e-waste recycling in Guiyu serves as a case study for other countries involved in similar crude recycling activities.

 
< Prev   Next >
Polls
What is the most important factor you consider when recycling E-Waste?
 
Latest News
Latest Videos
© 2010 A greenSpan Computer Recycling, Inc - Pittsburgh Computer Recycling Nationally
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.