[Ict4devwg] Tech-rubbish – a threat to Vietnam

Vern Weitzel vern.weitzel at gmail.com
Tue Jun 30 16:38:23 BST 2009


http://english.vietnamnet.vn/tech/2009/06/855628/

Tech-rubbish – a threat to Vietnam
17:21' 30/06/2009 (GMT+7)

VietNamNet Bridge – Vietnam could become a dumping ground for electronic waste 
with hi-tech products of all kinds flowing into the country, especially cell 
phones, said an expert on China Duong Danh Dy.


Nokia representative, vice chief of the General Department of Environment Bui 
Cach Tuyen (middle) and Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environment 
Nguyen Van Duc attended a ceremony calling for recycling mobile phones in HCM 
City on June 13.

“In the past, super-cheap Chinese motorbikes ruled the Vietnamese market and 
then they disappeared because their low quality was not accepted by Vietnamese 
users,” said Dy. “Nobody paid attention to where the huge volume of ‘corpses’ of 
these vehicles went although it was a big source of pollution.”

Danger from super-cheap mobile phones

New models of super-cheap mobile phones from China are being introduced everyday 
in Vietnam. The most outstanding characteristic of this type of hand phone is 
that they have all the popular functions of cell phones, such as music players, 
cameras, video recorders, Bluetooth, etc. and they are very similar from design, 
function to price.

Nowadays, it is very simple to create a new brand of mobile phone by visiting 
trade centres in Shenzhen, China, where Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) 
provide all models of cell phone from the cheapest to the most expensive. 
However, Vietnamese mobile-phone traders can only buy finished products and 
cannot control product design, quality, or function.

Many traders also import mobile phones in kilos, used phones or broken phones. 
They don’t pay attention to quality; of 10 phones imported from China in this 
form, only one works on average. The remaining are dismantled for components.

All of these things are pushing the domestic market for mobile phones into chaos 
and Vietnam is on its way to becoming a dump for hi-tech rubbish.

Efforts to recycle cell phones

Nokia became the pioneer in recycling cell phones to protect the environment. It 
launched a campaign in mid June to collect 5,000 old cell phones for recycling.

According to a Nokia survey of over 6,500 customers in 13 countries, only three 
percent of people said they recycled their phones and 44 percent said they kept 
their phones although they didn’t use them.

Sony Ericsson has applied a global warranty policy, which ensures that all 
unused cell phones collected at its certified points will be recycled in an 
environmentally-friendly way.

VietNamNet/TT





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