@VergeScience
  @VergeScience
Verge Science | Your old phone is a veritable gold mine @VergeScience | Uploaded July 2018 | Updated October 2024, 17 minutes ago.
E-waste is more than phones and laptops. There’s gold, silver, copper, and lots of other precious metals powering your electronics, and that makes for some valuable “e-waste”. And a recent study proposed that it’s now more cost-effective to dig minerals out of old electronics than out of the Earth. We crack open some old tech to see where these metals are hiding, and find out just how hard it is to reclaim them safely.

Clarification: in citing India, China, and South Africa as suffering from growing e-waste problems, we didn’t mention that those countries are also producing record amounts of their own e-waste, in addition to anything being imported from other countries. E-waste from all sources is on the rise, forcing governments to figure out how to deal with it safely and efficiently.

Subscribe: bit.ly/2FqJZMl

Like Verge Science on Facebook: bit.ly/2hoSukO
Follow Verge Science on Twitter: bit.ly/2Kr29B9
Read More: theverge.com
Community guidelines: bit.ly/2D0hlAv
Your old phone is a veritable gold mineA microscopic look at why the world is running out of sandThis is Verge ScienceWe tested NYC water for lead and the results were confoundingBlood types are a 20-million-year mystery88,000 tons of radioactive waste – and nowhere to put itWhat zero gravity really feels like in the “vomit comet”Why the risk of space collisions is skyrocketing nowThis monster plant is trying to take over. What if we let it?The cosmic secrets inside this tiny meteoriteYour future tech may rely on deep-sea miningUnlocking the secrets hidden inside your voice

Your old phone is a veritable gold mine @VergeScience

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER