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Bali talks tackle toxic e-waste | Bali talks tackle toxic e-waste |
(about 8 hours later) | |
An international meeting on waste management has begun in Bali, Indonesia, to highlight the risks of hazardous waste. | |
Ministers from nearly 170 countries will be considering setting up a new body on electronic and computer waste. | Ministers from nearly 170 countries will be considering setting up a new body on electronic and computer waste. |
The five-day meeting is expected to focus on the impacts of hazardous waste on human health and livelihoods. | |
It will also look at the disposal of massive amounts of electronic waste such as old mobile phones. | |
Reports on all types of hazardous waste - from ship-breaking to mercury poisoning - are also on the agenda of the more than 1,000 delegates attending the meeting. | |
Opening the conference, Indonesian Environment Minister Rahmat Witoelar said his country was particularly exposed to the illegal dumping of toxic waste. | |
"Due to its archipelagic nature, with the second longest coastal line in the world, Indonesia is vulnerable to illegal traffic of transboundary hazardous waste," he said. | |
The meeting is organised under the UN Basel Convention, an international treaty regulating the global trade in hazardous waste with the aim of minimising its generation and movement across borders. | |
China's waste | |
The talks come as Greenpeace has been campaigning against the flow of US computer waste to China. | The talks come as Greenpeace has been campaigning against the flow of US computer waste to China. |
The group says unprotected workers in China melt circuit boards to retrieve precious metals, risking their health. | The group says unprotected workers in China melt circuit boards to retrieve precious metals, risking their health. |
China has ratified the Basel Convention, but Greenpeace says a large volume of shipping traffic into southern China - often via Hong Kong - makes smuggling into the country easy. Computer circuit boards are much prized by recyclers in China | |
Hong Kong has laws against e-waste, but fails to include circuit boards in its definition, the BBC's Vaudine England says. | Hong Kong has laws against e-waste, but fails to include circuit boards in its definition, the BBC's Vaudine England says. |
The US has not ratified the convention. | The US has not ratified the convention. |
Participants at the meeting are expected to adopt a "Bali Declaration", highlighting the importance of health and waste management for global development strategies such as reducing poverty. | |
"As we are all too often reminded, hazardous wastes continue to pose serious risks for human health and the environment," said Basel Convention Executive Secretary Katharina Kummer Peiry. | |
"It is especially important that this meeting reaffirms the undeniable interdependence between environmentally sound waste management and the achievement of sustainable development, especially for those who need it the most." |
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