Story
and photos by FRANK CARINI/ecoRI News staff
Providence-based Green Penguin’s shelves are full of electronics ready to be reused or remarketed |
This
year three Rhode Island companies are on pace to divert some 6 million pounds
of e-waste from the state’s waste stream. But that 3,000 tons is just fraction
of what is collecting dust in basements, attics and garages, being tossed
illegally into Dumpsters or vacant lots, and being left on the curb
for no one in particular.
In
fact, much of what we label “e-waste” is actually not waste at all, but
electronic equipment or parts that can be recycled or sold for reuse.
Since
electronics are complex devices made of a variety of materials, such as lead,
nickel, cadmium and mercury that could pose risks to human health or the
environment, the e-waste collection, processing and recycling industry is
equally complex.
In
Rhode Island, Green Penguin, and e-waste partners Office Recycling Solutions (ORS)
in East Greenwich and Cranston-based Indie Cycle LLC, each play
a role in managing the state’s unwanted electrical and electronic devices. And
there’s plenty of it out there.
Electronic
waste is the fastest growing municipal waste stream in America, according to
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Keeping these items from being
incinerated orlandfilled has multiple benefits. For example, according to
the EPA, recycling a million laptops saves the energy equivalent to the
electricity used by 3,657 homes in a year, and one metric ton of circuit boards
can contain 40 to 800 times the amount of gold and 30 to 40 times the amount of
copper mined from one metric ton of ore.
While
more than 2 million tons of e-waste winds up in
U.S. landfills annually and only some 10 percent of discarded e-waste
is recycled, there are plenty of people holding crumb-caked toasters, obsolete
video-game consoles and bulky TVs with antennas who want to dispose of these
items properly.
This
desire to do right explains why Indie Cycle, on a cold 15-degree day
in early January, collected 10,000 pounds of e-waste in a span of three hours
in a Whole Foods Market parking lot.
Worldwide
some 50 million metric tons of e-waste are disposed of annually.
Partnering up
Green
Penguin co-owner Jeremiah Joseph called the e-waste business an industry of
scale. “It’s a big food chain,” he said. “It’s about transportation, space and
labor.”
However,
none of the three local businesses working together to collect, reuse and
recycle Rhode Island’s e-waste is a huge operation. In
fact, Indie Cycle, a small family-run business, doesn’t have
much more than two trucks. There's no warehouse. The two co-owners work
part-time jobs, and their most trusted employees are their two 19-year-old
grandchildren, Jordan and Jose.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Indie Cycle is based right here in Charlestown. They will be doing a collection in conjunction with the Charlestown Farmers Market on August 8.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Indie Cycle is based right here in Charlestown. They will be doing a collection in conjunction with the Charlestown Farmers Market on August 8.
Indie Cycle is an e-waste collector, period. With
two to three weekend collections at events such as farmers markets and the
occasional weekday collection, the 5-year-old business is on track to collect
300,000 pounds of electronics this year.
“We’re
a small business trying to grow so we can do more markets and events,”
said IndieCycle’s Phyllis Hutnak, who owns the business with her
husband, Tony. “We’re the face of e-waste collection. We’re the ones taking the
stuff from residents and businesses.”
Every
spring and fall, Indie Cycle holds collection days in both Lincoln
and Cumberland, collecting 15,000 to 30,000 pounds each time. The business
routinely holds collections in Pawtucket, picks up at area schools and
businesses, and has traveled to North Attleboro, Douglas and Worcester, Mass.,
to hold collection drives.
All the
e-waste Indie Cycle collects, whether in Rhode Island or
Massachusetts, is delivered to ORS, which pays a certain cost pound, depending
on the item. TVs and air conditioners don’t fetch the same amount of coin as,
say, computers.
ORS, while also an off-site e-waste collector, is
largely an on-site operation — another step along the industry’s “big food
chain.” “We’re like the Sanford and Sons (1970s sitcom) of e-waste collection,”
said Michael Mancuso, who co-owns ORS with his son Brent.
Besides
receiving a delivery or two fromIndie Cycle weekly, ORS also routinely
receives Pods and Pack Rats full of computers, laptops and cell phones
and non-primo e-waste such as TVs, batteries and fluorescent bulbs. In fact, 85
percent of what the company handles is TVs, according to Brent Mancuso.
But
the company’s East Greenwich facility is in line to become a much busier place.
On July 1, the state downsized its e-waste collection program,
consolidating 38 local sites — every city and town, with the exception of
Providence, had one — into five regional hubs, at the Central
Landfill in Johnston, and in Narragansett, West Greenwich, Warren and Little
Compton. The state-run program is contracted to New Hampshire-based RMG Enterprise Inc.
With
a slimmed-downed state e-waste program, the Mancusos see ORS playing
an even bigger role in the collection and processing of Rhode Island
electronics. The company’s 10 employees now unload four to six Pods/Rats daily,
received from municipalities, schools and businesses.
Some
98 percent of the e-waste ORS handles comes from Rhode Island. The company, incorporated
in January 2006, has tried to expand its reach into Massachusetts, Connecticut
and New York, but has found such a move complicated and expensive.
ORS
weighs and tracks every piece of e-waste that comes into its facility,
supplying each municipality the company serves with an annual report of e-waste
collected.
E-waste
and its many components — aluminum, copper, boards, wiring, plastic, metal —
are commodities and there is an outlet for everything, Mancuso said.
‘We’re a volume business,” he said, “and right now we only have a tiny market
share.”
As
a certified Responsible
Recycling Practices (R2)
business, ORS is committed to the responsible recycling/reuse of these
commodities. The company, along with its local partners, don’t want e-waste
shipped overseas and burned or buried irresponsibly.
Green Penguin rents space at the ORS East Greenwich
facility, buying reusable electronics and e-waste parts from ORS before they
are moved on to other handlers along the food chain.
“Ben’s
a scrounger. He and Green Penguin have an eye for what can
be remarketed and reused,” Mancuso said. “It’s a good
relationship. Partnering with Green Penguin and IndieCycle has helped us
grow organically.”
Green
Penguin was born in 2004 out of George’s laptop refurbishing company. The
company now has 15 full- and part-time employees and is the local expert when
it comes to reusing andremarketing cast-off electronics. It holds
collection drives, occasionally picks up e-waste from schools and businesses,
and schedules drop-offs at its office, but Green Penguin’s main focus is
finding a second or third home for electronics and/or their guts.
The
company sells 99 percent of its inventory on eBay and is a top-rated seller on
the popular website. Green Penguin has 3,100 unique listings on eBay, with one
to 300 units of each, that sell anywhere from $2.79 to $2,500. The items most
sought after, according to George, are vintage electronics.
“We’ll
test it to make sure it works, but most customers want to refurbish the item
themselves for their own collection,” he said. “eBay allows us to simulate a
brick-and-mortar store. It brings customers to us.”
Although
the company has physical space on Manton Avenue in Providence, the space is
much more warehouse than retail operation. And since most of its merchandise is
sold through the Internet, the company is a well-organized machine. All
inventory is catalogued and photographed.
“We’re
like an auto junk yard for e-waste,” Joseph said. “Inventory management is a
big part of what we do. We’re in the urban mining business.”
NOTE CHARLESTOWN RESIDENTS: go somewhere else
According to Town Administrator Mark Stankiewicz, in his July report to the Town Council, the state has decided to consolidate its E-Waste program so that e-waste will only be accepted at a few regional collection points. The one closest to Charlestown is Narragansett’s Public Works Department at 260 West Moreland, between 7 PM and 3:30 PM, Monday through Friday.