1820 Pandora Street
Vancouver, BC
V5L 1M5
604-879-GEEK (4335)
OPEN - Tues. ~ Sat.
11:00am - 6:00pm
CLOSED - Sun. Mon.
Tours every Wed 4pm; Sat 4pm & 2pm. [MORE INFO]
Free Geek VancouverEthical Computer Recycling for Vancouver |
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1820 Pandora Street
OPEN - Tues. ~ Sat. Tours every Wed 4pm; Sat 4pm & 2pm. [MORE INFO] Recent Stories
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computer recyclingGeek Booth at Car-Free Vancouver Day, Sun. June 14 at Grandview Park (Commercial Drive & Charles)Submitted by ifny on Fri, 2009-06-12 21:52.Jun 14 2009 - 12:00 Jun 14 2009 - 18:00
Come join Free Geek at the car-free festival of the year! SUNDAY JUNE 14, NOON-6PM GRANDVIEW PARK (Commerical Drive and Charles) [MAP] For the third year in a row, we'll be cavorting around our geek booth at this year's Car-Free Vancouver Day. We'll be on hand to provide info about responsible e-waste recycling, our volunteer and education programs, and free and open source software. And there will be geeks! Possibly wearing glasses...
For more information about the festival visit the [Carfree Vancouver website]. » Free Geek lecture and discussion, Wed. June 17, 7-9pm @ Parkgate Library, North VancouverSubmitted by ifny on Fri, 2009-06-12 21:16.Jun 17 2009 - 19:00 Jun 17 2009 - 21:00
Free Geek speaks on ewaste, responsible recycling, reuse & sustainable software WHEN: Wed. June 17th, 7pm-9pm WHERE: Parkgate library, 3675 Banff Court, North Vancouver [MAP] COST: Free of course! Registration: 604-929-3727
Free Geek's co-founder and co-ordinator Ifny Lachance will speak about their innovative solutions to ewaste issues, including ecologically responsible ways to dispose of your old computers, the ethics of computer use, and free and open source software. Please join us for an evening of information and engaging discussion!
Free Geek Vancouver is a nonprofit community organisation that reduces the environmental impact of waste electronics by reusing and recycling donated technology. They provide education, job skills training, Internet access and free or low cost computers to the public.
» FG @ SFU Sustainability Festival, Sept. 24 10am-5pmSubmitted by ifny on Sat, 2008-09-13 18:57.Sep 24 2008 - 10:00 Sep 24 2008 - 17:00
» Free Geek Chat SalonFree Geek Vancouver runs a real-time group chat salon, primarily for socializing and relaxing. Volunteers, staff and enthusiasts from all over the galaxy have been known to hang out in our chat room. It may seem quiet in there at times; people often have it running in the background while they do other things like surfing the internet or cooking dinner. Be patient! NOTE: if you want ask questions about items for sale, please *phone the store* during regular operating hours.
If you have your own IRC client, you can find us on:
irc.freenode.net #freegeek-van
If you've never used IRC, or don't have an IRC client,
enter through the magic portal BY CLICKING HERE
INSTRUCTIONS: you'll see a little box that says 'Nickname' which you can change to a nickname of your choice (without spaces). The channel is freegeek-van. Then hit 'Connect' and you will see a page divided into sections. If you type in the little rectangle at the bottom of the page and hit 'Enter' on your keyboard, the other people in the room will see your message. There is a list of people in the room on the right hand side. If you want to get a specific person's attention, try typing their name and waiting around for a while. For more information on IRC, you may want to check out some of the following information: Wikipedia entry about IRC (Internet Relay Chat) What is IRC, and how does it work?
E-Waste: A Dirty Little Secret
E-WASTE: A DIRTY LITTLE SECRET By Ifny Lachance
SLEEPING DRAGONS We're cozy with our electronics, We give them names and sit them on our laps. They wake us up in the morning, fix us coffee, bring the newspaper. They bear messages from lovers. Yet computer components play host to some of the most persistent pollutants found in the biosphere. Ingredients read like a Borgian cocktail menu: Mercury in LCD screens can cause central nervous system and kidney damage. Monitors and circuit boards contain lead, which damages brains and kidneys, and poisons the blood. Lead, along with barium, protects users from radiation while sitting in front of the computer; encounter it in your air, water or food and it will damage your internal organs. Cadmium is part of the phosphor compound inside CRT monitors. Inhaled, it can cause severe respiratory distress, emphysema, death. It accumulates along the foodchain, particularly in wheat, rice and potatoes and the tissue of shellfish. When ingested, it disrupts the functioning of the liver, bones and kidneys. It's also a carcinogen, along with beryllium on motherboards and toner from printers. Computers are manufactured cheaply in poor countries, due to less stringent environmental standards and loose occupational regulations. Consumers in wealthier countries blissfully enjoy the benign phase of the IT life-cycle, as toxins squirrelled away inside hardware remain quiescent until disturbed. FRIENDLY FIRE Particularly problematic are polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), flame retardants impregnated in the plastic of electronics. They're used in everything from coffee makers to computers. Brominated flame retardants are rising stars on the global pollutant charts. Close chemical cousins of PCBs, they're endocrine disruptors, confounding hormones and reproductive systems after they leach into the environment. When burned or buried, they can become dioxins, which cause DNA mutation. Such substances biomagnify, meaning they progressively accumulate all the way along the food chain. They can be passed onto an organism's predators and young, leading to very high concentrations in creatures like marine mammals, and less intelligent species like homo sapiens. We're lucky. We live in a country with legislation protecting us from direct contact with these substances. But of course, once toxic substances enter the biosphere, the sky's the limit. According to Health Canada, Canadian women have PBDE levels of five to ten times higher than women in any other industrial country. In Europe, between 47,000 to 95,000 square kilometres are already known to be contaminated by hazardous wastes. Countries such as the Netherlands have spent over a billion dollars to minimise and collect dioxin from incinerators, but still have to contend with hazardous emissions and disposal of toxic ashes. Modern, programmable computers were first created about 70 years ago. Regrettably, modern sustainability has lagged at a glacial pace. The ice caps are not amused. TSUNAMI OF EWASTE Ten years ago, the average life span of a computer was six years. Now it's two. Canadians generate 140,000 tons of electronic garbage annually; that would equal about 5,600,000 computers. UN figures say 50 million tonnes of e-waste are generated yearly. Our passion for innovation and speed leaves us vulnerable to all manner of confidence games. Welcome to the garden path. Your guides? Microsoft, Apple & Co. Software companies like Microsoft pressure consumers to upgrade their computers. They purposely make their products incompatible with previous versions, so people feel the need to keep up or be left behind (why else is Windows 98 not compatible with XP or NT, other than greed?). Artificial bloat makes software slower and more demanding than necessary, increasing pressure to buy new computers. This in turn keeps hardware manufacturers sitting pretty. Both software and hardware are often cynically designed to become obsolete in a fixed time frame, a profit-exploiting strategy called planned obsolescence. A recent survey by Softchoice Corporation found that only half of all business computers in North America meet the minimum requirements for Microsoft's new operating system, Vista. Only 5% of current computers in England can run its full features. Thus the term “the Vista layer,” Greenpeace's vision of future archaeologists unearthing mounds of abruptly discarded systems. Vista's demanding system requirements can be largely traced to features designed to monitor and control users' behaviour, all in the name of protecting Microsoft from software piracy. Despite its notorious bugs, security holes and incompatibility, many consumers feel like they have no choice but to junk their computer and upgrade. The City of Vancouver plans to spend over $7 million to switch to Vista. Think Apple is better? That's what their marketing department would have you believe. Apple fashionista hardware is heavily proprietary, making replacement parts expensive and non-interchangeable. The iPod is a textbook example, where a replacement battery is not as cost-effective as buying a whole new iPod, and seductive new releases are constant. Additionally, in the absence of legislative pressure, Apple and other hardware manufacturers continue to employ noxious ingredients that later become toxic waste. This dumps the environmental costs onto governments and ultimately citizen. PLANNED OBSOLESCENCE VS. SUSTAINABLE SOFTWARE Some citizens would rather dump proprietary software instead, and get more life out of their computers. Consumer alternatives have been around for about 20 years, and have more recently bloomed user-friendly and accessible. Free and open source (aka collaborative) software is community-based and supported, and designed to promote individual liberty and collaboration in design. Examples include Linux operating systems like Ubuntu, browsers like Firefox, or office suites like Open Office. They are considered virus-free, more stable and can be freely updated online. Less bloated, they work on older hardware, and they play well with other formats like .docs. After all, free and open software is designed to facilitate community needs, not shareholders. The market is starting to respond. Dell has released a computer that ships with the Ubuntu operating system. This is a brave move, considering Microsoft's clout and history of coercing hardware manufacturers. Governments, particularly at the municipal level, are starting to consider free and open source software as a practical, cost-effective alternative. After all, why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free? FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY In North America, unwanted hardware is often thrown in municipal landfills, or stored by folks who are unsure just where it should go. More conscientious consumers deliver their materials to recyclers. “Recycler” sounds green and friendly. Unfortunately, about 80% of this hardware heads directly offshore to poorer countries, usually China. There, “recycling” generally consists of haphazard dumping, burning, and picking through by unprotected workers. Entire villages devote themselves to this industry, from seniors to kids. With hands or crude tools, wearing little or no safety equipment, they contaminate themselves and their communities. Circuit boards are held one-by-one over coal fires to melt off the lead solder. Hydrochloric acid solutions in open vats are sloshed over chips and cards to remove the gold, and poured into the nearest water supply or onto the ground. Piles of wires are burned. Monitors tubes are smashed with hammers to recover the copper yoke, exposing workers to phosphor compounds. Leftover leaded glass and plastic junk is dumped in irrigation canals or fields. The ecosystem has become well acquainted with this mess. One would be hard pressed to find potable water in rural China these days. In the notorious Chinese city of Guiyu alone, the e-waste industry is estimated to be worth CDN$140 million. It's about the size of North Vancouver, population 130,000. One million tonnes of e-waste are treated here yearly by 5500 family-based operations, supporting 100,000 migrant workers. Guiyu bloodstreams are laden with lead, according to a 2006 study by Shantou University Medical College. Local creeks have the Ph level of strong acids. The photographer Edward Burtynsky seduced the public's eye with beautiful, terrible images of industrial wastelands around the world. Many of these are e-waste sites; certainly they are not the usual images evoked by the term 'recycling.' THE DIRTY LITTLE SECRET Electronic trash is now considered the most heavily traded toxic waste in the world. In 1992, Canada ratified the Basel Convention, agreeing not to ship hazardous waste to poorer countries. In 1996, China prohibited the import of e-waste. Yet business continues to boom. Watchdog organisations like the Basel Action Network (B.A.N.) point to a lack of enforcement. Their investigations of e-waste dumping abuses sent a wake-up call to the international community; they also advocate for the use of non-toxic materials in computer manufacturing and a crack-down on rampant smuggling. Unscrupulous exporters physically hide or euphemize the contents of shipments, referring to toxic waste as "recyclables" or "plastic waste." More cynically, they pretend that shipments are bound for repair or charitable re-use abroad. About 75% of computers sent to cities like Lagos, Nigeria for this purpose are irredeemable junk on arrival. Founder and environmental justice activist Jim Puckett was instrumental in ensuring the Basel Convention had teeth. He speaks plainly about the disappointing lack of scrutiny, particularly in North America: "Until recently, nobody bothered to enforce the rules even though Canada is a Party to the Basel Convention...The dirty little secret is that the electronics manufacturers and governments and a cadre of unscrupulous recyclers are all benefiting immensely via an illicit traffic in hazardous waste electronics that moves largely from Canada and the United States to countries like Nigeria, India, Pakistan and especially to China...Toxic waste, if left to a 'free market,' will follow the path of least resistance." While Environment Canada has begun to investigate outgoing containers in the Port of Vancouver, he says that smugglers know their chances of getting caught are "slim." The toxic heritage of the Industrial Revolution is becoming too generous for one planet to bear. From the bubbling soil of False Creek to the pea soup over Hamilton to the black water of Guiyu Province, we are faced with convergence of crises. We need more than science, law and enforcement. We need every last one of us. THE MORE THINGS CHANGE There is good news. Since August 2007, old electronics have been turned away from BC landfills. Consumers pay a fee when buying new goods, the idea being that these fees will be directed to financing the provincial e-waste program. The program was designed and is being conducted by the Electronics Stewardship Association of British Columbia (ESABC), with depots managed and administered by Encorp, of bottle-depot fame. A commitment has been made to not export to poorer nations; all materials will be sent to smelters and grinders on Canadian soil. For many sustainability advocates, it is bittersweet news. Producers who continue to use hazardous materials are still not held accountable for environmental costs. Local recyclers are left out of the loop, increasing transport costs. While superficially attractive as a form of Zero Waste, smelting and grinding down computer equipment is hardly considered innovative. Worst, in the rush to reclaim raw materials, re-use has been almost entirely ignored. Despite being the most direct form of sustainable recycling, an effective re-use component to the program does not exist. Re-use reduces consumption and prevents waste, while conserving resources required to manufacture new goods. Thus far, ESABC's attempts to incorporate re-use into their program has consisted only of lipservice and a badly-implemented classified-style listing. British Columbians who cannot afford a computer will continue to be left behind. The ESABC plan has come under fire by non-profits and community organisations for disregarding reuse and interim recycling/repurposing alternatives to smelting or grinding viable computer equipment. Our grandmothers knew that an ounce of waste prevention is worth a pound of cure. WHAT YOU CAN DO: RE-USE
REDUCE
RECYCLE
(Excerpts of this article were first published in Common Ground magazine, June 2006) Geek Booth at Car-Free Vancouver Day 2008, June 15 at Grandview Park (Commercial Drive & Charles)Submitted by ifny on Tue, 2008-04-29 21:27.Jun 15 2008 - 12:00 Come join Free Geek at the Car Free Festival of the year! We'll be geeking out in Grandview Park (Commerical Drive and Charles). There will be info about e-waste, our volunteer and education programs, and free and open source software. And geeks! Possibly wearing glasses. The festival runs from 12:00-6pm. For more information about this astonishing festival visit their website If you would like to volunteer to help out, email ifny [at] freegeekvancouver [d0t] org or phone 604-879-GEEK (4335)
» Free Geek Vancouver Qualifies as First Canadian Non-profit e-Steward!
Free Geek qualifies as first Canadian non-profit to be recognized in ethical recycling program ~ No toxic e-Waste dumping in Canada or abroad ~ Finally, it will be easier for computer owners to find a responsible recycler who will not dump computer equipment in landfills, or ship it off to Asia to be dumped over there.
Frustrated with the lack of accountability in the computer recycling industry, Free Geek Vancouver, a community-run non-profit, has managed to qualify as an e-Steward by upholding the most rigourous international standard for social and environmental responsibility around -- the Electronic Recycler's Pledge of True Stewardship, designed by a global e-waste watchdog, the Basel Action Network (BAN). The founder of BAN and Free Geek representatives held a press conference today at their Vancouver facility.
Above: Jim Puckett (seated left) and Ifny Lachance address the press. Photo by David Repa.
"Most people are not aware that 50-80% of so called recyclers will export your old computer to countries like China where it will be managed in horrific nightmarish conditions, that are highly polluting and damaging to human health," said BAN's Jim Puckett. "The Canadian and US governments fail to properly control this toxic trade, and for that reason we created the e-Stewards initiative. It's not for the faint of heart. It's designed to be the most rigourous environmental and social justice criteria for electronics recycling in the world."
"It's hard for the public to know who to trust with their old computers-- this should help!" says Ifny Lachance, a coordinator at Free Geek Vancouver.
"This qualification means a lot to us because it can't be bought -- you have to earn it, you have to prove that you're not lying. Because it's so easy to abuse the system, we think all computer recyclers should be assumed guilty until they prove themselves innocent. That doesn't always make us popular with the competition," she continued.
Free Geek Vancouver is a nonprofit computer recycling and reuse centre, where the community can pitch in to help test, refurbish or dismantle unwanted computer equipment donated by the public. No experience is required, and volunteers receive free computers and workshops. FreeGeek supports its activities through a computer thrift store and recycling revenue.
Above: Volunteers dismantling computers destined for recycling at Free Geek. Photo by Ifny Lachance.
"Lots of folks are in desperate need of access to technology. So here is a perfect way to reduce waste; with a little know-how, our volunteers give unwanted computers a new life, and make them available to people and non-profits for free or very cheap," said David Repa, another coordinator at Free Geek. "This also reduces pollution from manufacturing of new computers, and gets everyone involved in being part of the solution, not the problem."
Electronic waste continues to be the most heavily traded toxic waste onthe planet. UN figures say 50 million tonnes of e-waste are generatedyearly. Canadians alone throw out 140,000 tons of equipment every year,the equivalent of about 5.6 million computers. Most of this materialthat is collected for "recycling" and "re-use" actually ends up dumped or burned in poor countries with few environmental or worker protections.
Left: This should not be called "re-use!" Electronic waste dumped in residential area just outside of Alaba market in Lagos, Nigeria. This e-waste is routinely burned here. Photo used with permission, © Basel Action Network. [More BAN photos here.]
Canada is a major illegal exporter of hazardous wastes, with smugglers and brokers outpacing enforcement officials. In 2006, during Canada's only enforcement effort to date, federal agencies seized 50 containers with 500,000 kg of ewaste at the Port of Vancouver; 27 Canadian companies settled out of court for about $2000 apiece; Ottawa still refuses to release their names. [read story]
Rather than loading your old computer onto a container ship for questionable destinations, Free Geek Vancouver contends that reuse is the highest form of recycling. The leftover material that must be scrapped stays almost entirely within Canada for processing, at facilities that verifiably do not export. A small amount of material is sent to other recyclers who can prove they abide by the Basel Convention. Free Geek itself takes the time to research recyclers before sending them anything, and expects them to be transparent as well.
A list of their recyclers is listed online for the public to see. Free Geek has always been open about their recyclers as a matter of course; additionally, their mailing list archive and meetings are open to the public. Part of the e-Steward qualification process involved BAN verifying that Free Geek Vancouver actually sends their materials to these recyclers as claimed.
"When we started, it was really hard to find recyclers who wanted to cooperate and put up with us; they're rare and it takes a lot of energy to find them and make sure they're for real. The work that BAN does with the e-Stewards program makes it easier for others to find the good guys," says Ifny.
"What have we learned? That secrecy and claims about 'trade secrets,' or even simple vagueness should set off warning bells -- not to mention that some recyclers just lie outright. You have to ask questions, dig deeper. Even re-use organisations can lie, saying they give the stuff to poor people or whatever, but everyone has to understand that no one is checking on them to see if it's true, or where they send their scrap. It should be mandatory for companies to provide names and bills of lading to a reputable third party, and to have real penalties for bad practices. It's harder for abuses to go on if we all try to watch out for each other, and share our resources."
Gastown Holiday Hardware Drive A Success
A local company in Gastown was kind enough to put on a hardware drive for us recently. Strutta, a new startup on the block, offered to pick up unwanted computer equipment from its neighbours and donate it to Free Geek. Almost 2,000lbs of hardware later, they got a taste of the labour involved in computer recycling, while helping make the community a healthier place for the holidays. We would like to thank all the participating companies who donated equipment to us. We hope to see more of your equipment in the future. Special thanks goes out to Jordan Behan who organised the event! More of his photos HERE
Earn a ComputerFree Geek receives donated used computers and refurbishes them with care. They are then "adopted out" to volunteers in exchange for 24 hours of service in our recycling facility. We call this the Computer Adoption Program, and anyone willing to come down and volunteer is eligible to join us and adopt a machine. The computer systems we create, called GeekBoxes, are loaded with the GNU/Linux operating system, called Ubuntu, and other Free Software. Our use of GNU/Linux enables our computers to run at speeds comparable with newer machines. GeekBox computers come with a wide range of software installed but are primarily designed for word processing and internet use. The GeekBox also comes with a basic class on how to use it. This is a very popular program.
*** FOR MORE INFO ABOUT VOLUNTEERING AT FREE GEEK, CLICK HERE! ***
Please don't leave your computer hardware in the alley!
Often, well intentioned folks leave out older monitors and computer hardware in the alley, in the hopes that someone will pick it up and find a new home for it. Unfortunately a lot of these items are smashed and stripped for copper and other metals. While walking to a friend's house recently, I noticed a pile of smashed computers monitors and four TVs. All had been smashed for their copper yokes. [see picture] Not only is this a waste, but it releases toxins into the environment. It can also hurt people who are probably not aware of the toxins inside CRT monitors and other equipment. Old computers may attract curious children. Please don't leave your old hardware outside. Recycle your computer equipment responsibly by bringing it to a reputable re-use/recycling centre. We would love to find a new owner for your old hardware! |
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