Millions of working mobiles are scrapped
By Nicole Kobie,
This Christmas, 11 million Britons expect to get a shiny new mobile phone as a gift, but a fifth of respondents to a new survey admit they just toss away old handsets - even if they still work.
According to the study conducted by Tesco Mobile, that means some two million mobile phones will be scrapped after the holidays - prompting the firm to launch its own recycling programme.
Andy Dewhurst, chief executive of Tesco Mobile, said: "As a nation, we're becoming greater consumers of electronic goods and with constant technological advances we're upgrading them more frequently too - these goods have almost become disposable."
But handsets can be recycled - even if Britons aren't aware of it. Indeed, just 18 per cent of people surveyed said they recycle their handsets, with the most common method for disposal listed as tossing them in the bin or just leaving old phones lying around the house. Research earlier this year found that unwanted UK mobile phones could be worth some £1 billion.
Not surprising then, that a third of people under 25 have no idea where their nearest recycling plant is.
"These results are very worrying," said Dewhurst. To help battle the waste, Tesco has launched two recycling services, one in-store and another online. Customers who turn in their old handsets will be given Tesco Mobile airtime or store vouchers. The retail giant is hoping to recycle a million handsets in the next year.
But mobiles aren't the only electronic goods getting dumped on the scrap heap. A quarter of respondents said they bin computers, printers and game consoles rather than recycle them.
Some 60 per cent said there isn't enough incentive to recycle household electronics. Despite 58 per cent of respondents agreeing that recycling is the responsibility of individuals, not the government, only a fifth said they bother to recycle household waste.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Mobile Analysis & Insight
Welcome to the stay-at-home Olympics
Inside the Enterprise: The Government has warned of disruption, and the Civil Service is practising working from home. Could IT yet save businesses from chaos on an Olympian scale?
- What should RIM do to recapture the attention of businesses?
- What can Intel bring to the smartphone market?
- OK, computer
- A data shock warning for Orange customers
- Is there such a thing as a secure tablet?
- Top 10 tech winners and losers of 2011
- 2011: The year in news
- BYOD: Old or new, good or bad?
- If retailers build it, will the shoppers come?
Latest Mobile Reviews
BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
Rating: ![]()
The Bold 9790 is the latest BlackBerry to run RIM’s new BlackBerry 7 OS, but does this budget offering for business users cut too many corners to compete? Julian Prokaza finds out.
advertisement
Most popular
- Google releases Chrome for Android beta
- Will someone rid me of these troublesome Macs?
- OneNote hits Google?s Android
- BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
- Google sends in Bouncer to sort out malicious apps
- Ubuntu vs. Windows 7 on the business desktop
- Who to trust after the VeriSign hack?
- Head to Head: Mac OS X 10.7 Lion vs Windows 7
- ACTA: the basics, the controversies, and the future
- BT considering Ofcom price cap appeal
Latest News Videos in Mobile
IT PRO Podcast: CES 2011
In the first podcast of 2011, we talk with Adam Griffin of Dell and Barry Collins of PCPro about tablets, the cloud and all the other exciting...
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





