Never underestimate Chipzilla's ability to execute - Gilbert Ann Sullivan
AS AUSSIE Environment Minister Peter Garrett opened a new e-waste recycling plant, environmentalists were falling over themselves to say that it was not enough to solve the country's epidemic of gadgety garbage.
The automated recycling plant in Sydney is the first of its kind and can recycle 20,000 tonnes of electronic waste when at full capacity.
However, Australians dump an estimated 140,000 tonnes of hazardous e-waste and Planet Ark founder Jon Dee said the plant would hardly be used because the Government had not introduced a national scheme that would make it easy for people to recycle their old electronics.
Even the electronics industry has also called for such a scheme, but the government does not really want to set one up. Computer manufacturers such as Dell and HP, councils and the mobile industry through its Mobile Muster program offer e-waste recycling services, but Dee said these were all ad hoc, hidden and hardly used.
Dee added that a flashy new recycling plant was useless unless you have a constant supply of computers going into it and, as it happened, most monitors and old computers are all heading for landfill. µ
L'Inq
AP
If you have a bit of a poke around, there's quite a few places that will take your old bits and pieces anyway. Some years back, I parted with about 2 tonnes of PC bits, all went to recycle, none to landfill. I live in Melbourne, Victoria

Paul
Well, to be brutally honest, Australia has alot of land that can be filled