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GREEN STAR's 2006
Electronics Recycling Event in Anchorage
April 28 & 29

Presenting Sponsor:

Photos courtesty of Brian Guzzetti, From the Far Corners Photography
Photos (top, left to right): Veco brings several truckloads of electronics to recycle. ~ Volunteers unload a truck. ~ Green Star staff assist Gabrielle Markel do the paperwork from the Girdwood collection effort. ~ Forklift drivers move around the collection area, loading pallets onto trucks ~ Volunteers load computers into boxes and onto pallets for transport. ~ A full pallet is weighed before loading.

How Much Stuff?

Quantity Recycled 671,787 lbs (336 tons)
Shipped to Seattle 31 40-foot trailers
Volunteers 325 people
Volunteer Hours more than 1800 hours worked
Househoulds participating 1,763 households
Businesses participating 393 (includes nonprofits and gov't agencies)
Nonprofits 130
Businesses and Gov't 240
Other communities collecting Homer & Fairbanks

Where & When

3444 Old International Airport Road, which is the former FedEx warehouse on the southwest corner of Jewel Lake and International Airport Road.

Business Day was Friday, April 28, from 10am to 4pm.

Household Day was Saturday, April 29, from 10am to 4pm.

We also offered scheduled pick-up service for businesses throughout the month of April. Call 278-7869 for details, prices, and scheduling.

Recycling Fees

Businesses, government agencies, schools, and some organizations were charged a small recycling fee to offset program costs. Household and 501(c)(3) non-profit rates were subsidized partially or wholly by several of our granting agencies.

    Businesses, Government Agencies, Schools, Other Organizations
    Non-Profits*
    Households
    30¢/lb
    Free
    $10/vehicle
    $5 additional for every TV or monitor over three

*Any 501(c)(3) public charity (does not include private foundations) non-profit organization.


What was Accepted?

Accepted: televisions, computer monitors, computers/laptops, keyboards, mice, modems, external drives, small scanners, printer, copy machines, cables, other computer peripherals, VCRs, DVD players, stereos, radios, phones, fax machines, camcorders, electric typewriters, microwave ovens, and most media (floppies, CDs, DVDs), telephones, cell phones, and similar products.

Not accepted: video and audio cassette tapes, smoke detectors, loose batteries, vacuum cleaners, and household electric appliances without circuit boards.

Where Did It All Go?

Once received, equipment was sorted onto pallets by type: monitors, TVs, computer CPUs, peripherals, small items and media. Special cell phone recycling and toner cartridge boxes were available. Additionally, participants recycled their cardboard boxes used to carry equipment, as well as mixed paper (mostly computer and software manuals), and plastic film.

When the boxes and pallets were full, they were weighed, recorded, and stacked into 40-foot trailers using forklifts. The trailers were moved to the Port of Anchorage for shipment to the electronics recycler (Total Reclaim, Inc.) in Seattle, Washington.

Once the materials reach Seattle, Total Reclaim, Inc., sorts all of the materials for reuse or recycling.

About 10% will be reused. Reused equipment is donated to either World Computer Exchange or Digital Partners, two non-profit organizations that re-deploy usable equipment to non-governmental organizations and educational programs in the developing world.

About 90-95% (by weight) of the remaining equipment will be recycled into new products. These materials are crushed and sorted.

Glass

Chunks of leaded glass from computer monitors and television screens await transport to Envirocycle, Inc. in Pennsylvania.
Glass grit from the grinding process will be sent to Doe Run, in Missouri, for use in the lead smelting process.

The video display component of most computers monitors and televisions is a cathode ray tube (CRT). The typical CRT contains 15 to 90 pounds of glass. To this glass, lead and other elements are added to protect the user from X-rays generated within the CRT. Disposal in landfills is not the most sound management option for waste CRTs because of the high quantities of lead in each screen. Glass recyclers are:

EnviroCycle, Inc. – Hallstead, PA – made back into leaded glass for monitors and TVs
All intact monitors that Envirocycle receives are inspected for the possibility of resale. All other units are dismantled. The average processing time is two weeks. Within one month, the glass cullet is back into the commerce stream as a new CRT.

Doe Run Company – Boss, MO – lead smelter
Anything that cannot be used to make new CRT glass is sent to a primary lead smelter for reuse.

Jones Quarry, Inc. – Olympia, WA – non-leaded glass

Tri-Vitro Corporation (maybe) – Kent, WA – non-leaded glass

Metals

Metal is separated using large magnets after being shredded.

Copper is the primary metal found in wires and cabling. These items are baled and shipped to copper smelters for copper recovery. Circuit boards are ground and shipped to copper smelters as well. The copper and small amounts of precious metals are recovered and the other circuit board material is useful for its BTU value during metal recovery. Aluminum structural pieces are baled and sold to aluminum smelters. Steel housings are baled and shipped to ferrous smelters (foundries).

Seattle Iron and Metals – Seattle, WA – copper wire recycling

Schnitzer Steel Industries - Tacoma, WA

Circuit Boards

Noranda Recycling, – San Jose, CA

Umicore Precious Metals Refining - Hoboken, Belgium

Plastics

Plastics generated from electronics waste are primarily ABS (acrybutidiene styrene) from keyboards, monitors, and CPU housings, and HIPS (high density polystyrene) from televisions. HIPS is regranulated and sold to companies that pelletize it and reuse it in injection molding to make new consumer products such as televisions, handheld computer games and similar products. ABS plastics include about seven or eight different resin types. The ABS is cleaned and baled and send to plastics recyclers. The companies below will either use the product commingled or separate it further by resin type and pelletize it for sale to end markets. Plastics can be used for a variety of new products including plastic lumber and pallets, carpet and carpet backing,

Plastic Nation, Inc. – Boca Raton, FL

Batteries

Allied Battery – Seattle, WA – recycling the lead-acid batteries

Inmetco – Ellwood City, PA – recycling all other batteries

Other Components

Items that will be discarded include wood and phenolic laminate common in old console televisions and insulation. This is estimated to be less than 1% of the material processed.

Volunteers & Volunteering

Almost all of the labor for this event is volunteer labor. We met our goal of 325 volunteers again this year. These volunteers worked more than 1,800 volunteer hours over the course of four days. Green Star wishes to thank each and every one of the volunteers who helped before, during, and after the event.

Sponsors & Partnering Organizations

This event is not possible without the generous support of our many sponsors and donors. Stay tuned as our list of sponsors grows.

Presenting Sponsor:
BP Exploration (Alaska)
Platinum Sponsors:
Bronze Sponsors:

Totem Ocean Trailer Express
Municipality of Anchorage
Rasmuson Foundation
FedEx Express

Teamsters Local 959
Arcticom
REI
Gold Sponsors:
Green Sponsors:
Horizon Lines of Alaska
Anchorage Media Group
Carlile Transportation Systems
Weaver Brothers
GCI
Total Reclaim, Inc.
Warning Lites of Alaska
Delta Cargo / Arctic Circle Air
Polar Supply Company
Alaska Printing
ACS
Costco - Debarr Road
Alaska Waste
Mettler Toledo Northwest
Smurfit-Stone Recycling Co.
Silver Sponsors:
Supporting Sponsors:
Lynden Transport
Anchorage Daily News
Independent Lift Truck of Alaska
Graphic Solutions
Moose's Tooth Pub & Pizzeria
AWWU
Terra Bella Organic Coffee
Alaska Warehouse Specialists
Salvation Army
Other Contributors:
Spenard Builders Supply
Great Harvest Bread Co.
Middleway Cafe
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Group
Coca-Cola Bottling of Alaska
Snow City Cafe
American Credit Card Systems
Bear Tooth Theater Pub & Grill
Anchorage Maintenance & Operations
Title Wave Books
Habitat for Humanity ReStore
Tesoro Iron Dog
American Fast Freight
Northwest Handling Systems
Ted Stevens Anchorage Int'l Airport
Anchorage Dept. of Health
& Human Services
Anchorage Community Work Service
Iditarod Trail Committee
Alaska Mill Feed & Garden Center
Alaska Bagel Restaurant
Alaska Center for the Environment
Chugiak Dog Mushers Association
Hot Licks Homemade Ice Cream
From the Far Corners Photography
Carrs-Safeway
Princess Tours
Blockbuster Video


Additional Green Star Programs





Additional Links:
  Green Star Award
  Green Events
  
Green Star Schools
  Site Assessments
  Electronics Recycling
  AK Materials Exchange
  AME Listings


Also made possible by generous funding from:

See list below for additional sponsors.
Green Star Logo

880 H Street, Suite 106
Anchorage, AK 99501
info at greenstarinc.org
907.278.7827
279.5868 fax

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