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Cell Phone Recycling
Fact Sheet
• According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, electronic waste (e-waste) is accumulating almost three
times faster than ordinary household trash.
o Researchers at Carnegie Mellon
University estimate that at least 60 million PCs have already been buried in U.S. landfills.
o An estimated 100 to 130 million
cell phones are no longer being used, many languishing in storage.
o Recycling cell phones reduces
greenhouse gas emissions, keeps valuable material out of landfills and incinerators, and conserves natural resources.
• Cell phones and accessories are made from valuable resources such as precious metals, copper, and plastics - all
of which require energy to extract and manufacture.
o According to the EPA, if Americans
recycled 100 million phones, we could save enough upstream energy to power more than 194,000 U.S. households for a year.
o If consumers were able to reuse
those 100 million cell phones, the environmental savings would be even greater, saving enough energy to power more than 370,000
U.S. homes each year.
o Recycling just a million cell
phones reduces greenhouse gas emissions equal to taking 1,368 cars off the road for a year.
o The EPA has targeted cell phone
recycling because fewer than 20 percent of cell phones are recycled each year and most people do not know where to recycle
them.
• In 2007, according to ABI Research, a N.Y.-based technology market research firm, 1.2 billion phones were sold
worldwide. Sixty percent of them replaced existing phones. In the United States, phones are cast aside after, on average,
12 months.
• Three things to remember before you recycle your wireless phone:
o Terminate your service
o Clear the phone’s memory
of contacts and other stored information. Go to www.recyclewirelessphones.com (click link below) to learn how to do this;
o Remove your phone’s SIM
card, if it has one. Phones that operate on GSM networks use SIM cards. If you are not sure if your phone uses a SIM card
or if you need assistance removing your SIM card, contact your wireless provider.
• You can drop off your wireless phone either through nationwide recycling programs such as Cell Phones for Soldiers
(www.cellphonesforsoldiers.com - click link below) , in retails stores that collect wireless phones – such as Have It Yahweh Books &
Gifts – or through mail-in programs.
www.recyclewirelessphones.com
www.cellphonesforsoldiers.com
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