Hard drives should not go in the general trash which usuallu heads to landfill - they should be sent to e-waste for proper disposal / recycling.
Older drives will have lead solder, and vintage hard drives will have even more toxic content potentially including cadmium, beryllium, and mercury. None of that belongs in landfill. Beyond old drives, newer drives have many valuable recyclable materials - send it to e-waste.
If only such e-waste recipients were more readily available and inexpensive. Even my not-so-small town only has e-waste days a few times a year, hope you’re off that day and time, and of course you have to pay to drop anything off. A real disincentive for the average person to do anything except throw e-waste into the trash.
Here in Norway any store that sells electronic products are required by law to also take in e-waste from any private person (and any private company that is a customer of that store) and handle that e-waste correctly.
All municipals are also required to make sure there are enough free e-waste return points for their citizens.
In Australia we just take it to an electronics retailer since 2011 - as they are now legally required to accept it and send it on to a certified e-waste disposal partner, provided they import over a certain threshold (avoids overburdening small businesses). For example if the store sells computers they have to accept computer e-waste, so you can drop it with them - even if you didn’t buy it there. It is all free.
In Montreal it’s pretty terrible. It’s a fragmented set of hodge-podge solutions. Batteries? Take them to the thrift store. Phone? Drop it off in a metal box next to a grocery store, but not separate batteries there! Bigger items? Go to an “eco-center”, only to find out they are not easily accessible by public transit and even if you find one close to a bus stop, it’s still a walk up an access street with no sidewalk where you notice the center is more for contractors to drive up in F350s and dump drywall, and when you show up on foot with a backpack full of crap they ignore you or look at you with a dull, bovine expression of “that wasn’t in the training video”.
Same here, we used to be able to at Best Buy, but they closed that in our town so now the only option I’m aware of is the church downtown doing an e-waste recycling day once every quarter or so.
I saved a perfectly good Trinitron from being recycled there one year.
Hard drives should not go in the general trash which usuallu heads to landfill - they should be sent to e-waste for proper disposal / recycling.
Older drives will have lead solder, and vintage hard drives will have even more toxic content potentially including cadmium, beryllium, and mercury. None of that belongs in landfill. Beyond old drives, newer drives have many valuable recyclable materials - send it to e-waste.
If only such e-waste recipients were more readily available and inexpensive. Even my not-so-small town only has e-waste days a few times a year, hope you’re off that day and time, and of course you have to pay to drop anything off. A real disincentive for the average person to do anything except throw e-waste into the trash.
You guys should be better at that.
Here in Norway any store that sells electronic products are required by law to also take in e-waste from any private person (and any private company that is a customer of that store) and handle that e-waste correctly.
All municipals are also required to make sure there are enough free e-waste return points for their citizens.
In Australia we just take it to an electronics retailer since 2011 - as they are now legally required to accept it and send it on to a certified e-waste disposal partner, provided they import over a certain threshold (avoids overburdening small businesses). For example if the store sells computers they have to accept computer e-waste, so you can drop it with them - even if you didn’t buy it there. It is all free.
https://www.dcceew.gov.au/environment/protection/waste/product-stewardship/television-computer-recycling-scheme
In Montreal it’s pretty terrible. It’s a fragmented set of hodge-podge solutions. Batteries? Take them to the thrift store. Phone? Drop it off in a metal box next to a grocery store, but not separate batteries there! Bigger items? Go to an “eco-center”, only to find out they are not easily accessible by public transit and even if you find one close to a bus stop, it’s still a walk up an access street with no sidewalk where you notice the center is more for contractors to drive up in F350s and dump drywall, and when you show up on foot with a backpack full of crap they ignore you or look at you with a dull, bovine expression of “that wasn’t in the training video”.
Same here, we used to be able to at Best Buy, but they closed that in our town so now the only option I’m aware of is the church downtown doing an e-waste recycling day once every quarter or so.
I saved a perfectly good Trinitron from being recycled there one year.
Our area in BC has free drop off all week, at the same place as bottle, can, battery, oil, etc collection.
Sometimes computer dudes hangout waiting to reclaim PC and laptop parts
Wish we had that. More than one occasion I wouldn’t have minded scavenging some parts.
I always open them and thoroughly trash the disks first.
I collect the magnets myself. They’re super strong and ive always found uses for them elsewhere
They should not usually go to landfills. That’s the problem here.
Yeah that was what i said?
Nobody is sorting through bagged trash like in the picture mate. Bagged trash generally goes to landfill.