Home working sparks tech sales boom and fuels UK e-waste concerns – research

1 January 2021, 00:04

A woman uses a laptop on a dining table
Working from home. Picture: PA

The Royal Society of Chemistry has warned that not enough old IT equipment is being recycled.

Lockdown restrictions and a spike in home office equipment sales have sparked concerns over the amount of e-waste the UK is producing, according to new research.

The Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) said that, despite nearly half of people who moved to home working during lockdown investing in new IT equipment, most failed to recycle the now redundant tech they had.

Its research, which used sales data from electronics retailer Currys PC World, found that 11% of people simply put old technology in the bin and only 13% chose to recycle it.

This is considerably lower than the 48% of people who said they invested in new equipment to help with remote working during lockdown.

The RSC said the influx of new equipment into the home without similar amounts being recycled is creating a growing mountain of e-waste.

It also issued a warning over a rise in the sale of fitness trackers, many of which contain precious elements such as gold, yttrium and indium, or are unrecyclable.

According to the report, sales of fitness trackers are up 45% year on year.

RSC president Professor Tom Welton said: “Clearly the coronavirus pandemic caused a rapid change to our work and lifestyle patterns, but a significant unintended consequence we are now facing is a rapid increase to the UK’s already growing e-waste crisis.

“That nearly as many people are binning their old tech as recycling it is a huge concern.

“We increasingly think about the sustainability of other items around the home, such as plastics and cardboard packaging.

“If we’re to have sustainable technology, we need to start thinking in the same way about our old gadgets, or we risk running out of the elements we need to produce these items while continuing to exacerbate the environmental damage caused by the consumer tech industry.”

A report by MPs on the Environmental Audit Committee (EAC), published in November, said tech giants should be banned from intentionally shortening the lifespan of devices, in a bid to cut down on the 155,000 tonnes of waste electricals which end up in UK household bins every year.

It said tech firms such as Amazon and Apple are “dodging their environmental responsibilities” and failing to help collect, recycle and repair old products.

Prof Welton said: “We know chemists are working on the tricky problem of how to separate more critical raw materials from electronic waste for recycling purposes, but we need local recycling infrastructure that enables the waste to be collected first.

“While we welcome the changes coming in to force at the beginning of January to ensure that retailers operate take-back schemes – an issue highlighted in the Environmental Audit Committee’s report to Government – it’s only possible to extract some of the more common raw materials on a large scale at the end of life. Many precious metals are never recovered.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

People walk by the Las Vegas Convention Centre

Smart home tech, AI and cars among central themes as CES 2025 prepares to open

Mark Zuckerberg

Meta criticised over ‘chilling’ content moderation changes

A mobile phone screen

Meta ends fact-checking on Facebook and Instagram in favour of community notes

An Apple phone

Apple to update AI tools after BBC complaint over inaccurate news alerts

Meta is ditching its fact-checking service

Meta ditches fact-checking on Facebook and Instagram in favour of X-style 'community notes'

A wallet with bank cards cash

35% of young adults ‘are concerned about their finances on a daily basis’

Broadcaster Cathy Newman at the Women of The Year Lunch and Awards 2019 in London

‘Haunting’ to see deepfake pornography of myself, says journalist Cathy Newman

A laptop user with their hood up

Ministers to crack down on deepfakes and sharing of illicit intimate images

Elvie Rise smart baby bouncer

British tech firm Elvie unveils smart baby bouncer

The phone maker first introduced its suite of generative AI tools a year ago (David Parry/PA)

More than four million people in the UK using Samsung Galaxy AI tools, firm says

Critics of AI have raised concerns about the technology's potential impact on the job market (Michael Dwyer/AP)

OpenAI is ready to focus on ‘superintelligence’, boss Sam Altman says

CES 2025 signage

CES ‘doesn’t have the same support’ from the UK as other nations, show boss says

Health Secretary Wes Streeting told MPs he believes in 'different courses for different horses' (PA)

Use of NHS app will ‘free up phone line’ for elderly lacking tech skills

CES 2025 Preview

CES 2025: AI-powered beauty mirrors and robot pets among gadgets on display

The firm said it would begin a pilot of the new system with a L'Oreal brand in stores in Asia later in 2025. (L'Oreal)

New L’Oreal skin analysis tool can help predict aging and cosmetic issues

Samsung's Vision AI smart assistant, which are built into Samsung's TVs to act as a virtual assistant

Samsung unveils plans to turn TVs into AI assistants