08 February 2007 - The electronics industry is often considered
a 'clean' industry. But sleek shiny gadgets hide a darker
side of the industry. Our new report 'Cutting Edge Contamination'
exposes that some of the electronics industries' biggest
brands, and their suppliers, are contaminating rivers and
underground wells with a wide range of hazardous chemicals
during production.
Most mobile phones, computers and other consumer electronics
are now manufactured in developing countries like China,
Mexico, Thailand and the Philippines. While labour practices
at these production plants used by major manufactures has
come under increasing focus there has been little research
into environmental impacts.
Samples taken from industrial estates in China, Mexico,
the Philippines and Thailand, reveals the release of hazardous
chemicals in each of the three sectors investigated: printed
wiring board manufacture, semiconductor chip manufacture
and component assembly.
"Over recent years we have seen an increasing concern
over the use of hazardous chemicals in electronic products
but attention has focussed on the contamination released
during disposal or 'recycling of electronic waste'",
said Dr. Kevin Brigden from the Greenpeace Research Laboratories.
"Our findings of contamination arising during the manufacturing
stage make it clear that only when we factor in the complete
life cycle will the full environmental costs of electronic
devices begin to emerge."
Global industry
The electronics industry is truly global with individual
components manufactured at specialised facilities around
the world often involving highly resource and chemical intensive
processes, generating hazardous wastes, the fate and effects
of which are still very poorly documented.
"There is shockingly little information on precisely
which major brand companies are supplied by which manufacturing
facilities. Responsibility for the contamination lies as
much with those brands as with the facilities themselves,"
said Zeina Alhajj, Toxics Campaigner, Greenpeace International,
"There has to be full transparency regarding the supply
chain within the electronics industry, so that brand owners
are forced to take responsibility for the environmental
impacts of producing their goods."
The study also documents the contamination of groundwater
wells at a number of sites, particularly around semiconductor
manufacturers, with toxic chlorinated chemicals (VOC's)
and toxic metals. Contamination of groundwater is serious,
since local communities in many places use groundwater for
drinking water.
At one site in the Philippines, three samples contained
chlorinated VOCs above World Health Organisation (WHO) limits
for drinking water. One sample contained tetrachloroethene
at 9 times above the WHO guidance values for exposure limits
and 70 times the US Environmental Protection Agency maximum
contaminant level for drinking water. Elevated levels of
metals, particularly copper, nickel and zinc, were also
found in groundwater samples in some sites.
The use of such toxic chemicals in manufacturing processes
also poses potential risks to workers through workplace
exposure.
A boy stands on the riverbed contaminated by the outflow
of the Compeq factory in the Guangdong Province, China.
Paying the price
Wastewater discharged from an IBM site in Guadalajara,
Mexico contained hazardous compounds, including some that
were not found at other sites. IBM's 'Supplier Conduct Principles
Guidelines' state that suppliers should operate in a manner
that is protective of the environment.
All major manufactures should take a good read of this
report and see what they can do to clean up the production
process of their suppliers.
Workers and people living near production plants are paying
the price of lax control and polluting practices of the
global electronics industry. Hiding behind anonymity of
its supplier chain just doesn't wash when other areas of
the supply chain are tightly controlled.
Electronics manufacturing remains at the cutting edge of
technological development and has a strong economic future.
There is no reason why it should not also be at the cutting
edge when it comes to clean technologies, substitution of
hazardous chemicals, greater worker health protection and
the prevention of pollution.