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My Quarterly Coltan-Cell Phone-Dead Gorilla Rant.

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Tyler Durden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 11:37 AM
Original message
My Quarterly Coltan-Cell Phone-Dead Gorilla Rant.
Edited on Mon Aug-01-05 11:38 AM by Tyler Durden
In the latest "SMITHSONIAN" is an article about the exportation of US "e-waste" to the third world, and the impact of that and the appetite for new wireless toys.

They refer to the "COLTAN" issue, in that now the Mountain Gorilla population of the Congo Wildlife Refuge where Tantalum (the most important element in the construction of cell phones and other wireless devices) is abundant and mined by political prisoners of the local regimes, which don't feed them, requiring them to kill Mountain Gorillas and Forest Elephants for "bush meat."

Now as the unsatisfiable greed for the latest in Cell Phone Toys in the West continues to peak and peak again, the story in the Smithsonian "e-gad!" (August 2005) stands as a reminder:

"Some gorilla populations in the Democratic Republic of Congo have been cut nearly in half as the forest is cleared to mine COLTAN (my caps), a metallic ore comprising niobium and TANTALUM (my caps) that is a vital component in CELL PHONES (my caps). (A couple of leading cell phone companies have SAID they are TRYING TO AVOID using coltan from Congo.)" http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues05/aug05/pdf/egad.pdf

A COUPLE OF COMPANIES??? TRYING TO AVOID???

SO Allow me to remind all you folks out there who can't get along without your cell phones (and how many NEW ones have you obtained since you started using them??), that EVERY technology has its price.

By the way, I do not use Cells or Wireless; I never have and never will. One must say, once in a while, THE WORLD WILL NOT BE THIS WAY WITHIN THE REACH OF MY ARM. Also, this was typed and submitted on a UMAX PC 350 AMD K26 made in 1998, using a 56K V91 modem on a wire line.

Can you hear me NOW? GOOD.
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Tyler Durden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 11:56 AM
Response to Original message
1. one kick for the gorillas.
RIP King Kong.
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Tyler Durden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 12:12 PM
Response to Original message
2. And one kick for the Forest Elephants.
RIP Jumbo.

Nobody out there want to justify the morality of technology at the expense of endangered species?
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BiggJawn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 12:17 PM
Response to Original message
3. So where did the Tantalum in your ancient 'pooter and modem come from?'
Don't try and fool yourself, they've been making capacitors out of Tantalum for almost 50 years now.
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Tyler Durden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 12:23 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. I opened it and checked this and would you believe:
"MADE IN CANADA."

One of the LEGAL sources of coltan.

I have to admit I was surprised myself, but the Congo mining started in 1997, and this beast was made in 1998, so my surprise is limited.
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BiggJawn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 01:38 PM
Response to Reply #5
11. It's probably Kosher then.
Canada? Really? wow...I can almost remember a time when electronic stuff was made on THIS side of the Pacific.. ;)

OK, the whole computer was assmbled in Canada, but how can you be sure the PARTS were all made there?
Still, given the lagtime in the product pipeline, I doubt there's Congo Tantalum in there.
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bleedingheart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 12:20 PM
Response to Original message
4. here is an article from Cellular News about the issue as well
http://www.cellular-news.com/coltan/

I don't like this part...i think there is far more people can do to stop the destruction of the Gorillas and their habitat...
"What to do ?

There is very little the "man on the street" can do to prevent Coltan exploitation as it is not a "visible" component of cellphones that can be differentiated when shopping, but continuing pressure on circuit board manufacturers has lead to many demanding that their Coltan supplies only come from legitimate sources. Similar pressure on other users of Coltan can also help to ensure that only legitimately mined and sold Coltan is used in circuit boards. At a government level, pressure on local politicians to drive awareness of the ongoing civil war in the Dem. Rep. of Congo and help to secure a resolution will help to prevent the extinction of the Mountain Gorilla.

The Tantalum-Niobium International Study Center (T.I.C.), the industry organisation representing producers, processors and consumers of tantalum and niobium around the world, said that it deplores the reported activities of illegal miners in the Kahuzi-Biega National Park and the Okapi Wildlife Reserve in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

It was agreed at the T.I.C. Executive Committee meeting in Brussels on April 3rd 2001 that the organisation would take a stand regarding the use and production of coltan mined in these World Heritage Sites.

"
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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 12:30 PM
Response to Original message
6. Yep
Forget cell phones, and look into the disposal of home computer components. Monitors, hard drives and keyboards that are broken or discarded get shipped to villages in China that exist only to render the plastic, metal, glass and chemicals that make up your average PC. Cancer rates in these villages are through the roof, and the byproducts from the burning have reached the water supply.

http://www.ban.org/ban_news/china_serves.html

CHINA SERVES AS DUMP SITE FOR COMPUTERS
By Peter S. Goodman, Washington Post Foreign Service

GUIYU, China, 24 February 2003 -- Unsafe Recycling Practice Grows Despite Import Ban

This is the end of the road for the toxic detritus of the computer age.

In towns such as this one on China's southeastern coast, vast quantities of obsolete electronics shipped in from the United States, Europe and Japan are piled in mountains of waste. Even as entire communities, including children, earn their livelihoods by scavenging metals, glass and plastic from the dumps, the technological garbage is poisoning the water and soil and raising serious health concerns.

China's role as dumping ground for the world's unwanted gadgets is an outgrowth of efforts by wealthy countries to protect their own environments. Many governments are encouraging the recycling of computers to keep them out of landfills and prevent heavy metals from seeping into drinking water. But breaking computers down into reusable raw materials is labor intensive and expensive.

In the United States, where more than 40 million computers became obsolete in 2001 alone, according to a National Safety Council report, as much as 80 percent of the machines collected by recyclers are being disposed of for about one-tenth of the price through a far simpler means: They are being sold to Asian middlemen, put on ships and sent here.

Officially, China has its own ban on such imports, but the law is easily circumvented through payments to corrupt customs officials, according to industry sources.

The real costs are being borne by the people on the receiving end of the "e-waste." In towns along China's coast as well as in India and Pakistan, adults and children work for about $1.20 a day in unregulated and unsafe conditions. As rivers and soils absorb a mounting influx of carcinogens and other toxins, people are suffering high incidences of birth defects, infant mortality, tuberculosis and blood diseases, as well as particularly severe respiratory problems, according to recent reports by the state-controlled Guangdong Radio and the Beijing Youth newspaper.

"At the same time that we're preventing pollution in the United States, we're shifting the problem to somebody else," said Ted Smith of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, an environmental advocacy group. "It's being exported and doing harm."

High Toll on Humans, Environment

On a recent morning in Guiyu, in Guangdong province, hundreds of men squatted in concrete-block sheds, sifting through computers and printers and breaking them into scrap with their bare hands. Some inhaled black clouds of toner. A tractor carted a mass of wires to an alley, where women melted them in barrels to scavenge their copper before spilling the leftovers into the dead-black Lianjiang River.

In a low building tucked at the bottom of a hill, a middle-aged woman leaned over a sheet of steel placed atop a charcoal fire, melting down capacitors pried from computers to harvest tiny amounts of gold. Ten feet away, a girl no older than 11 bent over a table, sorting through more circuitry.

"Today there's no school," said the boss, Zheng Conggong, 27, when asked why the girl was there. "Vacation." It was 10 o'clock on a Monday morning, a regular school day everywhere else in China. When the boss stepped away, the girl timidly confirmed that she works here every day, all day. Her fingers were quick and nimble, clearly well-practiced.

Nearly every crevice of the town showed evidence of the trade, from the strips of plastic and shards of glass choking the river to the piles of motherboards, hard drives and keyboards in front of nearly every home. The landscape was poisonous. Glass from monitors contains lead, which afflicts the nervous system and harms children's brains. Batteries and switches contain mercury, which damages organs and fetuses. Motherboards contain beryllium, the inhalation of which can cause cancer.

Trucks bring in drinking water from more than 10 miles away because the local supply is not potable. Near a riverbank that has been used to break down and burn circuit boards, a water sample revealed levels of lead 190 times as high as the drinking water standard set by the World Health Organization, according to a report released last year by the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition and another U.S.-based environmental group, the Basel Action Network.

The environmental groups had their samples analyzed by the Hong Kong Standards and Testing Centre Ltd., according to their report. A sediment sample found levels of lead and other heavy metals such as chromium and barium hundreds of times as high as U.S. and European environmental standards for risk. The water test confirmed an earlier sample taken by a reporter for a Chinese-language publication in Hong Kong, Eastweek Magazine, which found even higher lead levels.

The report by the two environmental groups, "Exporting Harm: The High-Tech Trashing of Asia," accused computer manufacturers of failing to assume responsibility for the pollution they cause by instituting their own recycling programs. It also criticized the United States for declining to ratify the Basel Convention, an international agreement signed by every other developed country that aims to limit the export of hazardous waste. As a result, recyclers in the United States are not in violation of domestic laws when they ship computer waste to poor countries in Asia.

...more...
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VelmaD Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 12:36 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. I don't think I want to live on this planet anymore
:cry:

People. Suck.
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Tyler Durden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 01:19 PM
Response to Reply #6
8. Hey Will! How goes it?
Well, I hope.

Here's the whole article in .pdf. It's got a lot of what you're talking about in it as well.

Cell phones, wireless pc's and laptops are just the major Tantalum users currently, and kind of my "pet peeve."

http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues05/aug05/pdf/egad.pdf
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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 01:26 PM
Response to Reply #8
10. Doing well, hanging in
Good to see ya. Remind me where you live. California?

Thanks for the link.
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Tyler Durden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 01:43 PM
Response to Reply #10
12. Michigan, for about another month or two...
The House in Canada is about 85% completed (enough to live in), the towers for the 3 800 watt generators are bought (but not up), the lumber for the barn is on site, and the wife's work permit is pending.

We could be in-country by the middle of September! I'll send you addy and all: you may need it if the Fascist get really nasty.
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nothingshocksmeanymore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-05 01:24 PM
Response to Original message
9. A very good point that needs to be made in between rants about oil wars
Thanks, TD
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