Mobile Recycling: Where are you? Where is India?

July 10th, 2008 | 8 Comments | by Ani | Share

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I woke to the obnoxious odor firing my olfactory neurons and signaling my motor cortex to cover my nose with my handkerchief or maybe even cease breathing for a few seconds till we pass the only entry to the nation’s capital New Delhi from National Highway 1 (NH1).

I took a look at the horizon behind the metal tops of trucks along my car and saw a real disturbing view. A whole big lot of waste from the capital being deposited on top to carve rusty colored mountains with crows and eagles hovering on top and flies dancing to the disco beat sounds of the falling waste from the top and the engine noise of the heavy duty trucks. Not an uncommon scene for now it has been ever since I can imagine down the memory lane of my visits to Delhi. But this time the site of this rather regular view made me think deep into the realms of the icy hot topic of Recycling and particularly mobile recycling article I read over at the Nokia Conversations.

India a land supporting more than one hundred billion lives, the fastest growing economic giant with endless ventures of various opportunities for all, yet there is hardly any hint of recycling in the air.

Practically there is no word about recycling in Indian homes, although we are taught in school and other education institutions about various things that can be recycled and eventually do well to mother earth.

The big question to ask is, “Will India ever start Recycling?”

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Drifting away from the huge piles of waste spread over miles I head towards Pitampura, to take a exit towards Narina. On way I could make out that a lot of shops displaying the word Nokia. This got my attention to take a quick bend from waste recycling to mobiles and the present scenario in India. It suddenly opened a new window of thoughts inside my gray and white matter connections.

Anther big question that may answer the above question is that, “Can Mobile Recycling carve a path for Waste Recycling in India?”

Let us take a look on how Nokia is undertaking this Recycling issue of old mobile phones which are otherwise filling up our closets.

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The fact, up to 80% of any Nokia device is recyclable and precious materials within it can be reused to help make new products such as kitchen kettles, park benches, dental fillings or even saxophones and other metal musical instruments.

Globally, half of those surveyed didn’t know phones could be recycled like this, with awareness lowest in India at 17%.

Between 65 – 80 per cent of a Nokia device can be recycled. Plastics that can’t be recycled are burnt to provide energy for the recycling process, and other materials are ground up into chips and used as construction materials or for building roads. In this way nothing has to go to landfill.

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Click here for a Video of how things are going around or watch below.

The effects of this new revolution on our environment are promising. From decreased CO levels to prevention of global warming.

These can be glanced up here.

A jerky stop amidst the buzzing traffic shakes my head into yet another horizon. Why will someone recycle his/her oldie? What will he gain out of this? Questions like these will continue to crop up and these do need answers. The water is as for now calm but it sure has made a ripple that may travel along in future can make big waves.

Cast what you feel about this in the following poll. Check out the Survey done by Nokia on this topic

Will You Give Your Old Mobile For Recycling?

View Results

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{ 8 Comments }

  1. Raj Says:

    amazing how nokia is working. i wud love to give my old mobile for recycling.

    good job nokia…

    im sure india will wake up to this call


  2. CHAPLIN Says:

    I think that this is a very important issue, and I agree that India and other countries are not doing their homework about this question.
    But there is not just India who is not recycling. And it is not important if it is a Nokia device or not, Sony Ericsson, Samgumg, etc, it’s mobile phones as well.

    That’s why I think that some countries shouldn’t deserve the value it has been given to them. It doesn’t matter if China or India or whatever are powerful economies, with a lot of technology, etc etc, if they get that but making a lot of pollution and don’t teach their people hot to fix the problems they create.

    Some people might laugh when “mobile” recycling is the subject, but the question is that mobile phones are made by plactic, and plastic does polute hardly.
    So let’s start thinking about recycling once for all and let’s start encouraging people to start recycling.


  3. GuileMeageerek Says:

    Thank you


  4. phone recycling Says:

    I think the other countries including India can also get in to the practice of mobile recycling,
    and non other than a lack of awareness, the various benifits of recycling, people
    are not come up. Still more websites has to come up with their home works to encourage
    people to start recycling.


  5. k.muthuvel Says:

    where is nokia old mobiles collection centers and recyclic process plant in south india………..if any body know please mess me………


  6. manmohan reddy Says:

    india had not yet stared mobile recycling,we are slow in disposing mobiles,so we have to start new centers to recycle mobiles,…….spread news to recycle the mobiles…


Trackbacks

  1. 10 Best Ways to Dismantle Your Mobile before you give it up for Recycling | The S60 Blog  
  2. Bookmarks about Recycling  

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