Pitt Engineers Propose Solutions for E-Waste Recycling Fraud
University of Pittsburgh
New research from the Hypothetical Materials Lab at the University of Pittsburgh Swanson School of Engineering develops a framework to understand the choices an electronic waste recycler has to make and the role that digital fraud prevention could have in preventing dishonest recycling practices.
Think about how many different pieces of technology the average household has purchased in the last decade.
Phones, TVs, computers, tablets, and game
consoles don’t last forever, and repairing them is difficult and often as
expensive as simply buying a replacement.
Electronics are integral to modern society, but electronic waste (e-waste) presents a complex and growing challenge in the path toward a circular economy—a more sustainable economic system that focuses on recycling materials and minimizing waste.
Adding to the global waste challenge is the prevalence of dishonest
recycling practices by companies who claim to be recycling electronics but
actually dispose of them by other means, such as in landfills or shipping the
waste to other countries.
New research from the Hypothetical Materials Lab at the University of Pittsburgh Swanson School of Engineering develops a framework to understand the choices a recycler has to make and the role that digital fraud prevention could have in preventing dishonest recycling practices.
“Electronics have huge environmental impacts across their life cycle, from mining rare raw materials to the energy-intensive manufacturing, all the way to the complicated e-waste stream,” said Christopher Wilmer, the William Kepler Whiteford Faculty Fellow and associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, who leads the Hypothetical Materials Lab.
“A circular economy model is well-suited to
mitigating each of these impacts, but less than 40 percent of e-waste is
currently estimated to be reused or recycled. If our technology is going to be
sustainable, it’s important that we understand the barriers to e-waste
recycling.”
Some
U.S. firms that have touted safe, ethical and green recycling practices never
actually recycle much of what they receive; instead, their e-waste was
illegally stockpiled, abandoned or exported. Between 2014 and 2016, the Basel
Action Network used GPS trackers in electronics delivered to U.S. recyclers,
showing that 30 percent of the products ended up overseas.
The
researchers developed a model framework that analyzes dishonest end-of-life
electronics management and what leads recyclers to pursue fraudulent
activities. They find that the primary way to ensure an e-waste recycler will
engage in honest practices with minimum supervision is to make it the more
profitable option, either by decreasing the costs of recycling or increasing
the penalties for fraudulent practices.
“The
main barrier to honest recycling is its cost,” said lead author Daniel Salmon,
a graduate student in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
“One of our main findings is that if we find a way to make it more profitable
for companies to recycle, we will have less dishonest recycling. Targeted
subsidies, higher penalties for fraud and manufacturers ensuring their
electronics are more easily recyclable are all things that could potentially
solve this problem.”
The
researchers also suggest the use of the blockchain as neutral, third-party
supervision to avoid fraudulent recycling practices.
“Our
model mentions the influence of monitoring and supervision, but self-reporting
by companies enables dishonesty. On the other hand, something like the
blockchain does not,” said Wilmer, who founded Ledger,
the first peer-reviewed scholarly journal dedicated to blockchain and
cryptocurrency. “Relying on an immutable record may be one solution to prevent
fraud and align behaviors across recyclers toward a circular economy.”
The
work is part of a larger NSF-funded convergence research project on the
circular economy, which is led by Melissa Bilec, deputy director of
the Mascaro Center, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering,
and Roberta A. Luxbacher Faculty Fellow at Pitt.
The
paper, “A Framework for Modeling Fraud in E-Waste Management,” (DOI: 10.1016/j.resconrec.2021.105613)
was published in Resources, Conservation and Recycling and coauthored by Daniel
Salmon and Christopher E. Wilmer at Pitt, and Callie W. Babbitt and Gregory A. Babbitt
at Rochester Institute of Technology.