California Greening Electronic Products: A Look at Consumption and Production
Thursday, January 28, 2010 - 2:00 p.m. to Friday, January 29, 2010 - 2:55 p.m.
Environmental Engineering Seminar Series
Featuring Jean-Daniel Saphores, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
The Henry Samueli School of Engineering, UC Irvine
Location: Engineering Hall 2430 Colloquia Room
Free and open to the public
Abstract:
The fate of used electronic products (e-waste) is of increasing concern because of the growing volume of e-waste and its toxicity. In the U.S. alone, the EPA estimates that approximately 2 million tons are sent to landfills and incinerators each year. Both the pressure to limit e-waste exports to developing countries and public concerns about e-waste toxicity are goading policy makers and recyclers to develop the recycling infrastructure. An alternative to implementing more comprehensive recycling strategies is to make electronics more environmentally friendly.
This seminar discusses on-going research that focuses on both consumption and production to make electronics more environmentally friendly. First, we will cover how much e-waste people have in storage, people’s willingness to recycle e-waste, and the importance of information. We will then talk about people’s willingness to pay for green electronics before presenting a methodology for designing more environmentally friendly alternatives using mathematical programming methods.
Share
Upcoming Events
-
EECS Seminar: Less Compute, More Intelligence – Efficient and Autonomous Generative AI and Agents
-
MAE 298: Microscopic Robots that Sense, Act and Compute
-
CBE 298 Seminar: Interface Modification for Electrocatalysis
-
CEE Ph.D. Defense Announcement: Machine Learning and Remote Sensing for Environmental Modeling - From Large-Scale Streamflow Forecasting to Malaria Risk Mapping
-
CBE Special Seminar: Operando Electrochemical Methods at Dynamic Energy Materials Interfaces