Waste crime is a growing global threat, with up to 30 per cent of waste shipments in Europe potentially illegal.
AI growth could add up to 5 million metric tons of e-waste by 2030, as rapid hardware upgrades and data center expansion increase environmental impact.
Discover the challenges India faces with e-waste from data centers. Learn about the recycling infrastructure and what can be ...
Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science & Technology, Earth Sciences, and MoS PMO, Personnel, Public ...
Ericsson and Umniah by Beyon expand collaboration to recycle decommissioned electrical equipment as part of the Ericsson ...
Earth Day 2026 shows how the electronics industry is tackling e-waste while pushing cleaner energy and more sustainable ...
Trans-World Events announces that registration is open for the 2026 co-located E-Waste World, Battery Recycling, Metal Recycling, and ITAD & Circular ...
The EastAfrican on MSN
Waste colonialism: Africa pays the price for global e-waste
Africa is becoming a hotspot for hazardous e-waste, putting thousands, including children, ...
The insurance industry has spent much of the past decade grappling with potentially asbestos-scale liabilities tied to per- ...
About 775 tons of trash arrive at Alachua County’s Leveda Brown Environmental Park & Transfer Station every day. Electronic waste, including discarded phones and laptops, is the fastest-growing waste ...
Rest of World on MSNOpinion
AI is about to make the global e-waste crisis much worse
As demand for AI hardware surges, much of the resulting waste will end up in non-Western countries.
The sixth Asian Beach Games, which started on Wednesday in Sanya, Hainan province, embrace zero-waste practices and ...
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