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CA Topic

E-Waste Collection Faces Gaps as Government Sets Sights on Recycling for Precious Metals

Brief Context

Context As India pushes itself forward for local electronics manufacturing, from semiconductor fabs to the Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS), e-waste recycling threatens to undercut the progress. About e-Waste in India E-waste — discarded electronic and electrical equipment — contains valuable materials such as copper, aluminum, nickel, cobalt, lithium, gold, and rare earth elements (REEs). India generated an estimated 4.17 million metric tonnes of e-waste in 2022, but only about

Source Content

Syllabus: GS3/ Economy; Environment

Context

  • As India pushes itself forward for local electronics manufacturing, from semiconductor fabs to the Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS), e-waste recycling threatens to undercut the progress.

About e-Waste in India

  • E-waste — discarded electronic and electrical equipment — contains valuable materials such as copper, aluminum, nickel, cobalt, lithium, gold, and rare earth elements (REEs).
  • India generated an estimated 4.17 million metric tonnes of e-waste in 2022, but only about one-third of this was processed through formal channels.
    • It is driven by increased use of electronics, rapid obsolescence, and consumer upgrades.
e-Waste in India
  • According to TRAI, India has over 93.9 crore mobile broadband connections, but accounts for only about 4% of global electronics consumption.

Gaps in Collection and Recycling

  • A 2023 report by the Indian Cellular and Electronics Association highlights that e-waste recycling is largely dominated by the informal sector, which handles up to 90–95% of e-waste using unsafe methods such as open burning and acid leaching.
  • Key Challenges:
    • Low formal collection (less than 10%) and recycling rates;
    • Health hazards for informal workers exposed to toxic substances;
    • Traceability issues in recovered materials, leading to leakage back into informal streams;
    • Fake reporting and malpractices in the EPR system — such as ‘paper trading’ of recycling credits — have raised concerns over credibility.
    • Lack of standardized inventory systems and third-party audits.

Policy and Industry Response

  • E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022: These rules aim to ensure environmentally sound management of e-waste, and strengthen the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) regime, requiring manufacturers, producers, refurbishers, and recyclers to register on the CPCB portal. Key provisions include:
    • Environmental compensation for violations;
    • Verification and audit mechanisms;
    • Circular economy promotion through scientific recycling.
  • Formal Recycling Infrastructure (February 2025): India has 322 registered recyclers with a processing capacity of over 22 lakh metric tonnes per year.
    • 72 registered refurbishers with a capacity of 92,000 metric tonnes per year.
  • Public Awareness and Education: MeitY, in collaboration with industry bodies like MAIT and NASSCOM, has launched awareness campaigns across 31 states/UTs.
  • Innovative models like ‘mandi-style’ aggregation systems are being piloted to link informal collectors with formal recyclers.

Road Ahead

  • Scaling up formal operations;
  • Curbing malpractices in the EPR system;
  • Enhancing product life cycles through repair;
  • Creating robust inventory systems;

Source: TH

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