Seattle magazine on MSN
82 Million Tons of E-Waste by 2030. Now What?
Every holiday season, our houses fill with upgraded gadgets and the promise that we’ll deal with the old stuff later.
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Jamie Hailstone is a U.K-based reporter, who covers sustainability. A photo taken on September 27, 2022 shows a 6-metre-tall ...
The digital age has brought unprecedented convenience, but it also comes with a growing environmental cost: electronic waste. Global e-waste reached 62 million tons in 2022 and is projected to hit ...
All those old wires, cords, tablets, phones and other electronics aren't just taking up space in drawers and closets – they're also extensively covering the planet. A United Nations report released ...
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam — Dam Chan Nguyen saves dead and dying computers. When he first started working two decades ago in Nhat Tao market, Ho Chi Minh City’s biggest informal recycling market, he ...
The Humane Ai Pin promised to be the next big thing in wearable tech but the device failed to attract users, becoming instead a poster child for AI's contribution to the global e-waste problem. The ...
IRVINE, CA / ACCESS Newswire / November 24, 2025 / Marwynn Holdings, Inc. (Nasdaq:MWYN) ("Marwynn" or the "Company"), a leading supply chain solutions provider for food, non-alcoholic beverages, and ...
The phone or computer you’re reading this on may not be long for this world. Maybe you’ll drop it in water, or your dog will make a chew toy of it, or it’ll reach obsolescence. If you can’t repair it ...
Hosted on MSN
Segregating dreams from scrap: Seelampur's e-waste economy moves to shadows but doesn't stop
New Delhi, Jun 15 (PTI) In the winding, congested alleyways of New Seelampur, a 500-foot stretch tucked deep inside east Delhi, life hums with the quiet rustle of wires, metal scraps, and fraying ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results