Study: Almost every second old smartphone is not disposed of

study
Almost every second old smartphone is not disposed of

On average, there are two old smartphones in German households that are no longer needed, but are also not recycled. photo

© Christin Klose/dpa-tmn

With its regulations on waste separation, Germany is considered the recycling world champion. But when it comes to the proper disposal of smartphones, kitchen appliances and washing machines, there are major deficits.

Lots of people in Germany prefers to hoard their decommissioned electronic devices at home instead of disposing of them properly. According to a study by the industry organization gfu Consumer & Home Electronics, 43 percent of all discarded smartphones do not get back into the material cycle. A third of the old stock of kitchen appliances, washing machines and consumer electronics is not recycled, according to the study published in Berlin on Wednesday.

The industry association blamed a lack of knowledge about existing and ecologically sensible return options for the low recycling rates. In the representative survey, 40 percent of people in Germany said they didn’t know that they could return their old devices to specialist dealers and markets – even if they weren’t bought there. According to their own statements, 70 percent of those surveyed had not yet known that this right of return also applies to many supermarkets and manufacturers. Only every fourth respondent was aware of the right to return used devices to online retailers.

The practical knowledge is missing

“Although Germany is a country of bulky waste, paper collection and the green dot, there is a blatant lack of practical knowledge when it comes to used technical products,” said Sara Warneke, Managing Director of gfu.

The survey also revealed that there are large gaps in knowledge about electronic recycling, especially among younger people. Only every second adult under the age of 35 knows how to recycle a large kitchen appliance. In contrast, the figure for those over 55 is 81 percent. At the same time, young people would be very interested in topics such as sustainability. “People between the ages of 18 and 34 are the most receptive to repairs and most emphatically ask for free return options and better education,” said Warneke.

In purely mathematical terms, every household in Germany has an average of 0.6 discarded washing machines, 0.7 large kitchen appliances, 1.7 laptops or consumer electronics devices and two smartphones. As a result, large amounts of raw materials were lost to the circular economy. Statistically speaking, every household contained 45 kilograms of steel, four kilograms of copper, three kilograms of aluminum – and above all because of the mobile phones and laptops, 0.3 grams of gold, which should actually be fed into the circular economy. The unused gold alone adds up to over twelve tons in Germany.

dpa

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