Tag Archives: Hazardous Waste

Over 200 tons of illegally imported electronic waste from U.S. found in Thailand, officials say

Thai officials on Wednesday said they seized 238 tons of illegally imported electronic waste from the United States at the port of Bangkok, one of the biggest lots they’ve found this year.

The waste, which came in 10 large containers, was declared as mixed metal scrap containing aluminium, copper and iron, but turned out to be circuit boards mixed in a huge pile of metal scrap, said Theeraj Athanavanich, director-general of the Customs Department.

The electronic waste — which is classified as hazardous waste under the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal — was found on Tuesday after the 40-foot containers became the subject of a routine random inspection, officials said.

The Basel Convention is an international treaty signed in 1989 meant to deal with hazardous waste flowing into developing countries as costs for disposal grew along with the amount of waste.

A U.N. report last year said electronic waste is piling up worldwide. Some 62 million tons of electronic waste was generated in 2022 and that figure is on track to reach 82 million tons by 2030, the report said. It said only 22% of the waste was properly collected and recycled in 2022 and that quantity is expected to fall to 20% by the end of the decade due to higher consumption, limited repair options, shorter product life cycles, and inadequate management infrastructure.

Thai officials show samples of illegally imported electronic waste from the United States which they said they seized at Bangkok Port during a press conference in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, May 14, 2025.

Sakchai Lalit / AP


Theeraj said Thai authorities are looking to press charges including falsely declaring imported goods, illegally importing electronic waste and planning to re-export the waste back to its country of origin.

“It’s important that we take action on this kind of goods,” he said. “There are environmental impacts that are dangerous to the people, especially communities around factories that might import these things for processing, then recycling.”

Electronic waste creates huge health hazards. Many components are laden with lead and mercury, cadmium and other toxins. Recyclers are after gold, silver, palladium and copper, mainly from printed circuit boards, but lax controls mean that facilities often burn plastics to release encased copper and use unsafe methods to extract precious metals.

A Thai official shows samples of illegally imported electronic waste from the United States which they said they seized at Bangkok Port during a press conference in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, May 14, 2025.

Sakchai Lalit / AP


Thailand passed a ban on the import of a range of electronic waste products in 2020. The Cabinet in February approved an expanded list of the banned waste.

Sunthron Kewsawang, deputy director-general of the Department of Industrial Works, said officials suspected at least two factories in Samut Sakhon province, which borders Bangkok, are involved in importing the waste. Last year, Thai officials found thousands of tons of smuggled cadmium waste at a factory in the province, Thai PBS reported.

Residents near the area were later found to have usually high levels of the poisonous metal in their urine, according to the report. Exposure to cadmium can cause flu-like symptoms, including chills, fever and muscle pain, according to the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Long-term exposure can lead to cancer, kidney, bone and lung disease.

In January, the Customs Department said it seized 256 tons of illegally imported electronic waste from Japan and Hong Kong at a port in eastern Thailand.

contributed to this report.

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New process for mining electronic waste could be a gold mine

Freeport, New York — At eWorks in Freeport, New York, piles of dusty televisions, personal computers, printers and other old tech are the start of an electronic treasure hunt.

“There is a value that would be there,” eWorks CEO Mark Wilkins told CBS News. “Maybe it’s a small value, but it’s our job to really go through that process and evaluate each one of those components.”

Wilkins’ team first tests to see if electronics still work. If not, they are disassembled, because anything with a chip can contain gold, and more than you might think.

And it’s not just the gold that can be seen with your eye on circuit boards, but also the minuscule pieces packed inside processors and other components. 

Alireza Abbaspourrad, an associate professor of food chemistry and ingredient technology at Cornell University, says there’s more gold in a ton of electronic waste than in a ton of ore mined from the earth.

Abbaspourrad explains that about one million used cellphones can produce “something close to 70 to 85 pounds of gold.”

But to date, the process has required harmful chemicals like cyanide to filter it out. So, Abbaspourrad and his team at Cornell developed a method they say is more efficient, and which carries less environmental risk. The process uses an organic compound to absorb gold ions like a sponge.

“Our sponge selectively targets only gold, and that’s a major difference,” Abbaspourrad said.

That gold can then be reused in solar panels, new electronics and possibly even jewelry. Easier and cheaper extraction could boost the financial incentive to safely recycle, and keep toxic metals out of landfills.

A United Nations report released last year found that in 2022, the world generated 62 million tons of electronic waste, such as items like outdated cell phones, and laptops. That marked an 82% increase from just a decade before.

And according to Cornell, global e-waste is expected to grow to 80 million metric tons annually by 2030.

“I think the world right now is much more aware of it,” Wilkins said.

Wilkins and eWorks sees that growing pile as an opportunity. Founded more than a decade ago, the company has created dozens of jobs for employees with disabilities who learn how to hand, sort and take apart old tech.

“Our mission is to provide training, education and employment for people with disabilities,” Wilkins said. “So, about 48% of our workforce are people with special needs.”

It’s a chance to help more people, and the planet, and it is made possible by mining gadgets for gold.

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