Many peoples leave danger e-waste as tv's motors fridges etc in forests or in natural ecology. I searching thos waste,dismantling at home and sorting this on e-waste and throw to scrap or danger waste bins. And i making many free money from there. Look at my channel i getting free Cooper ,aluminium,iron and make it profitable.. etc... look at my channel and support me by subscribe thank you
Congratulations! The work they do is very interesting. In 20 years I hope to upload a video of my own company like this one but from Argentina. Cheers!
Many peoples leave danger e-waste as tv's motors fridges etc in forests or in natural ecology. I searching thos waste,dismantling at home and sorting this on e-waste and throw to scrap or danger waste bins. And i making many free money from there. Look at my channel i getting free Cooper ,aluminium,iron and make it profitable.. etc... look at my channel and support me by subscribe thank you
Many peoples leave danger e-waste as tv's motors fridges etc in forests or in natural ecology. I searching thos waste,dismantling at home and sorting this on e-waste and throw to scrap or danger waste bins. And i making many free money from there. Look at my channel i getting free Cooper ,aluminium,iron and make it profitable.. etc...
Exciting stuff!!! Any Americans with recommendations for similar companies? I look forward to the next generation of products that will develop with the end of the product's use in mind.
Many peoples leave danger e-waste as tv's motors fridges etc in forests or in natural ecology. I searching thos waste,dismantling at home and sorting this on e-waste and throw to scrap or danger waste bins. And i making many free money from there. Look at my channel i getting free Cooper ,aluminium,iron and make it profitable.. etc... look at my channel and support me by subscribe thank you
We do actually save a lot of working electronics from the shredder. We also have an asset recovery section of our business where we refurbish working electronics and give them a second life. We are working towards limiting all unnecessary waste, which includes recycling working electronics.
How many people are willing to buy old out of date electronic items? This is why we have e-waste as nearly everybody wants new, there is a tiny market for old product and spare parts. The electronic culture changed from repair to replace many decades ago. I know it's not good but that's capitalism for you, new product feeds the economic machine. Fortunately, there are ways to recycle some e-waste to prevent it going into landfill.
@BuildingTheEmpire but this old electronics could be used, for example, by collectors from all over the world, or sell it for a small price to stingy people, recycling is nonsense
it is often not known how they have been treated, stored and handled or how many hours use have occurred. if you want to fix electronics you need to go much lower down the chain. and then there's transportation and economics.
Yes, you're right. We saw how many working electronics were entering our warehouse still, which is what led us to start our asset recovery sector. Reduce, repair, re-use and only then should we be recycling.
@@TotalGreenRecycling yes here I am a pawn, people often throw away functional electronics, and I have to know because, for example, I collect old mobile phones, and every time I find something like that, it usually works
@@TotalGreenRecycling Well done. There is a market for working used electronics. Also keep an eye out for collectible items such as later model Betamax video recorders and decent hi-fi separates, which can have a significant value even if not working.
Hi Vinayak, thanks for taking interest in our business. We're afraid it's pretty much impossible to answer your question as it's "How long is a piece of string?" kinda question... It depends on where, how big, what equipment... If you'd like a specific advise I'm sure our directors would be happy to help. Feel free to send us your enquiry with your full name and company details via our website here: www.totalgreenrecycling.com.au/contact-us
Australian. They are doing that on-site in Australia and not just shipping it wholesale off-shore for someone else to deal with. And so they should. No doubt a response to ongoing concern. The Australian Government in with some underwriting, and no doubt some enlightened West European initiative involved with it.
That place looks like Stig of the dump dark ,dusty E waste is labour intensive. One way to cut costs is forcing the unemployed to offer services for recept of benefits this is not exploitation so an unemployed getting 120 dollars a week does a days work in this facility gets what's more important a reference for another job or get hired by the recycling company just a thought.
Many peoples leave danger e-waste as tv's motors fridges etc in forests or in natural ecology. I searching thos waste,dismantling at home and sorting this on e-waste and throw to scrap or danger waste bins. And i making many free money from there. Look at my channel i getting free Cooper ,aluminium,iron and make it profitable.. etc... look at my channel and support me by subscribe thank you
Expensive phones have more platinum gold (white gold) and yellow gold than cheaper phones. This drives the sales prices up. People think it's silver or stainless steel, they are so dumb.
Many peoples leave danger e-waste as tv's motors fridges etc in forests or in natural ecology. I searching thos waste,dismantling at home and sorting this on e-waste and throw to scrap or danger waste bins. And i making many free money from there. Look at my channel i getting free Cooper ,aluminium,iron and make it profitable.. etc... look at my channel and support me by subscribe thank you
These hazardous items go through a variety of different processes. Certain things like the leaded glass in old CRT monitors is sent off to a smelter in Port Pirie, the lead (which is hazardous if left in landfill) is removed and re-used in the manufacturing industry. We have a variety of different processes for each item, but yes, much of it is recycled completely.
While we can't recover everything, the shredding process is what allows us to get many of the valuable materials out of the items. With a variety of different machines dedicated to extracting each material out separately after the shredding process. Although we do agree, recycling should be the LAST resort to avoid losing any valuable materials. First we should be minimising how much we buy and secondly re-using and refurbishing what we DO buy, before sending it to the recycling plant.