Computer recycling Recycling
Recycling
  1. Intercon and CEO Brian Brundage featured in Green Manufacturer Magazine and Online
  2. Federal guidelines needed and Intercon Solutions leading the way - Platts
  3. Financial News Network and Intercon Solutions
  4. CEO, Brian Brundage featured on the Epodcastnetwork.com
  5. Intercon Solutions featured in Adweek
  6. Intercon Solutions compared to Google and Facebook - MSNBC
  7. Intercon CEO featured on MSN Careers and Career Builder
  8. Bit By Bit - Intercon Solutions featured in Recycling Today.
  9. Intercon Solutions featured on Save my Planet, part of the Live Well National HD Network
  10. Intercon featured in "This week in Chicago" Time Out Chicago
  11. Earth911 - What really happens to your ewaste
  12. Computer User - THE RESPONSIBLE LEADER IN e-WASTE RECYCLING
  13. Intercon Solutions featured in The Wall Street Journal
  14. Illinois Passes Lofty E-cycling Legislation
  15. SkinInc: Intercon Solutions is greening the spa and salon industry
  16. Maximum PC - The Story of E-Waste and Intercon Solutions
  17. CBS - Protect against Identity Theft with Intercon Solutions
  18. ABC Live Green with Hosea Sanders “Truly Green Recycling – Intercon Solutions”
  19. Recycling Today - Intercon recycles EPS, foam and light gauge plastics
  20. Intercon Solutions featured speaker at Upcoming Indiana Recycling Coalition Conference
  21. Spring Cleaning with Intercon Solutions - in Computer User
  22. Intercon Uses Reverse Engineering to Recycle Styrofoam
  23. Are You in the Pallet or the Recycling Business? Introducing E-Recycling: The Fastest Growing Segment of the Recycling Industry
  24. Company designs machine to recycle polystyrene
  25. MSPAlliance Launches E-Recycling Program for Global Membership
  26. ABC Action News - Intercon Processes for green awareness and e-waste recycling drive
  27. Investors Business Daily - Leaders & Success - Intercon Solutions
  28. Chicago Tonight /WTTW Channel 11 - Intercon Solutions processing for the manufacturing industry
  29. Deborah’s Place 2010
  30. Recycling Today.com – Intercon Solutions Receives OHSAS 18001 Certification
  31. TBO.com – Recycling electronics today
  32. Intercon Solutions goes to the forefront of Safety
  33. WGN – DTV Transition Special - Recycling
  34. Tossing out your old TV, Properly
  35. Intercon takes giant steps to save the environment
  36. Intercon Representative Ossie Ally Helps Innisbrook Go Green on Fox 13
  37. The Recycling Newspaper – American Recycler features Intercon Solutions
  38. International Herald Tribune / Global Edition of the New York Times / Featured Top Processor - Intercon Solutions
  39. The Green Way to Throw out E-Waste, NBC National Evening News with Brian Williams
  40. Chicago Tribune - Old ways of destroying electronic waste are being thrown out
  41. TV Recycling that is good for environment.  ABC 7 - Chicago
  42. Top Processor Intercon Solutions recycles for Wisconsin
  43. Computer Clean Up – E-cycling Near You
  44. SouthTown Star - Intercon handles E-Waste Spring Clean Up Event
  45. Star Tribune - Minnesota / Intercon is a solution
  46. Shape Magazine - Green is the new pretty
  47. Label it: The Earth Day Challenge – Whitley County
  48. Schererville Community News – What do I do with my old electronics?
  49. Chicago SunTimes.com - Intercon Solutions nominated for Innovation Award
  50. Discovery Channel - Things we love to hate
  51. Chicago Sun Times August 2007
  52. Intercon Solutions Plans Program to Raise Environmental Awareness
  53. The News Tribune.com - Every speck of your trash is this company's treasure
  54. American Recycler - A Closer Look
  55. Recycling Today - Disassembly Line
  56. The Today Show with Lester Holt
  57. Interactive Media - It's Not Easy Being Green
  58. May 11th, 2007 - WYCC-TV
  59. The Norman Transcript.com - Chicago Heights recycler reverses manufacturing
  60. A Handbook for Earth Friendly Living by Crissy Trask - It's Easy Being Green
  61. Columbia Tribune.com - Electronics recycler stays ahead of U.S. curve
  62. Chicago Business.com - On the Other End of the Line
  63. Waste News.com - Intercon Solutions names Travis Griggs wireless recycling chief
  64. Recycling Today?s Plastics Recycling Conference - Electronic Recovery
  65. Electronic waste piling up in Illinois, around the world
  66. Office and Commercial Real Estate Magazine - Recycling Electronics
  67. The Business Connection - A Message from the President
  68. E-Prairie.com - We Recycle Aluminum Cans, Plastic; Why Not Cell Phones, Computers?
  69. Intercon Solutions to Update Facility
  70. Firm turns recycling practices up a notch
  71. Fermilab "Best in Class" for Program to Reduce E-waste
  72. Public Works Magazine - The cost of e-waste
  73. DailySouthTown.com - Electronics recycling
  74. TechOnLine.com - Recycling e-waste
  75. Crain's Chicago Business - Stamp of approval
  76. Chicago Sun-Times - P.C. PC disposal
  77. Biz Tech Magazine - Forgotten, But Not Gone
  78. First Business - Profit from Old PC's
  79. Recycling Today - Intercon Solutions adds plant
  80. The Star - Electronic recycler expands with move to Chicago Heights
  81. Chicago Sun-Times - De-Lightful Move
  82. Solid Waste & Recycling - Intercon Solutions moves US plant
  83. Waste News.com - Illinois e-waste recycler moves to new facility, expands capacity
  84. RecyclingToday.com - Electronics Recycler Opens New Facility
  85. Information Security & Product Destruction News - Electronics Recovery
  86. ICCM Weekly - Environmental CRM: Toward a Corporate "Recycling Mindset" for Retired Assets
  87. UPI Technology News - Old mobile phones a hazard
  88. Red Streak - Old PCs not just high-tech landfill fodder
  89. Norton E-Zine - Are Recycled PCs Harming the Earth?
  90. IAER Electronics Recycling Newsletter
  91. Tin Technology - Making a business out of e-waste
  92. Fermilab - Recycle Electronic Waste
  93. RecyclingToday.com - Intercon Solutions Launches Online Electronics Recycling Resource
  94. CBS2chicago.com - High Tech Trash
  95. Waste News - E-recycling Industry Continues Evolution
  96. Crain's Chicago Business - Intercon Solutions Recycling Division
  97. Business Xpansion Journal - Recycling Old Computers?
  98. The Star Newspaper - Donate or recycle those old computers
  99. Computer Dealer News - Canada's e-waste problem needs a cleanup
  100. TechTarget.com News - Where old servers go to die
  101. An intimate look at being "green"
  102. Brian Brundage, CEO

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May 27th, 2011

What Really Happens to Your E-Waste

by Alison Neumer Lara

Intercon workers on the decontsruction line in a recycling facility outside of Chicago. Photo: Courtesy of Intercon

Find your local recycling solution for electronics

In an enormous warehouse just outside Chicago, pallets of computer monitors, hard drives and keyboards wait for disassembly. Bales of wires stand ready for pickup. Buckets of printed circuit boards glint with copper and gold.

Intercon Solutions is one of the nation's largest e-waste recyclers, pulling in $7.5 million in revenue last year through its 250,000-square-foot processing facility.

It's not a glamorous business, but it is a growing one. The U.S. generates about 3 million tons of electronic waste annually, yet recycles just 15 percent. More states are expected to pass or strengthen e-waste laws – presently only 23 have one on the books – and the electronics industry recently stepped up its efforts, too, announcing plans to triple e-cycling rates by 2016. At the federal level, President Obama established an e-waste task force and legislators introduced a bill last fall to ban e-waste exports.

Handled improperly, however, e-cycling poses a serious health and environmental hazard. Reports continue unabated of illegal electronics dumping overseas.

In India and China, where an e-waste site may be nothing more than a village street, unprotected workers out in the open extract precious metals by burning piles of PVC-coated wires or soaking circuit boards, releasing toxins such as lead and mercury into the air and water.

Even in the U.S., companies such as Intercon – that pledge to recycle 100 percent of materials and deal only with domestic processors – are the exception rather than the rule. Less stringent businesses may reclaim valuable metals and other materials, then dump the rest in landfills (where pollutants leak into the ground), if not sell it overseas. Or their methods may be subpar, such as shredding components, which comingles metals and plastics (that end up as waste), and lofts dangerous residues into the air.

"There's a huge difference between true end-of-life recycling versus other recycling," says Intercon CEO Brian Brundage, who estimates that perhaps a quarter of domestic e-cyclers are properly qualified and certified for the job.

E-waste firms are in fact de-construction firms. In some cases, they may transform the materials themselves into a new product, but mostly they're a meticulous way station where multi-material devices are dissected and refined into elemental components (aluminum, steel, gold, etc.), then sold back to the manufacturing industry.

Pallets of recyclables wait in storage at the Intercon warehouse. Photo: Courtesy of Intercon

At Intercon, for example, once workers disassemble computer processing units (CPUs, the big blocks that sit under your desk), hard drives head to one part of the warehouse where they're stripped of precious metals and sent through a type of warping/compacting machine that renders the data unreadable. (It's a step beyond wiping the hard drive, requested by Intercon client the U.S. Department of Defense.) The remaining aluminum – 85 percent of the hard drive – is destined for new products such as car parts or furniture.

Intercon partners with other companies for processes it doesn't handle on site such as removing the plastic casing from copper wires or smelting circuit board metals, before sending materials to the proper end user (e.g. the wire manufacturing or electronics industry).

The company also accepts its clients' light bulbs, batteries, paper and packaging waste. The latter led to an interesting exception at Intercon: polystyrene. Brundage, 39, who started working in a scrap yard as a teen, designed a machine to compact the foam right on the factory floor into hard ingots for plastic lumber and parking lot bumpers that he gives back to clients.

But why bother? Most e-cycling companies don't. Is it even lucrative?

At heart, Brundage says he's a treehugger, dedicated to decreasing waste and conserving resources. "I want to offer a real recycling solution," he says. "We need these metals and materials so badly."

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