Saskatoon classroom gets creative to reduce electronic waste - Action News
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Saskatoon

Saskatoon classroom gets creative to reduce electronic waste

With screwdrivers and pliers in hand, Grade 6 and 7 students at Montgomery School in Saskatoon carefully dismantlelaptops, race cars, cellphones and printers, to make use of what's inside of them.

About 37,000 tonnes of e-waste recycled in Saskatchewan since 2007

Teacher David Crowell helps students take apart an electronic during class. The project started as a school-wide initiative to find reusable items in the trash. (Trevor Bothorel/CBC)

With screwdrivers and pliers in hand, Grade 6 and 7 students at Montgomery School in Saskatoon carefully dismantlelaptops, race cars, cellphones and printers.

The electronics are either past their useful lifeor no longer work. But the students are making use of what's inside of them.

It's part of a class project to cut down on the amount of electronic waste or e-waste that ends up in the landfill.

"The idea is ... how do we look at old items that would have probably been considered worthless and find the value in them, and look at ways of bringing that value out," said teacher David Crowell.

Saskatoon elementary school is helping to cut down on electronic waste

3 years ago
Duration 2:32
Montgomery School in Saskatoon is teaching students how to give electronic waste a second life

Classes at the school began working with the non-profit Saskatchewan Environmental Society on a projecttwo years ago. Students were asked to gothrough the school's trash bins and sort items tosee what could be reused or composted.

The Grade 6/7 curriculum includes looking atthe social impact of electricity and waste management, and with donated electronics gathering dust at the school, Crowell thought his classcould learn how to reuse e-waste.

So far, the class has had success in creatingkeychains out of circuit boards. They were recently sold at a school event, with funds going toward future class projects.

Most of the e-waste is metal, which Crowell takesto a local recycler.

Students created keychains out of circuit boards from the e-waste they dismantled. They sold them at a recent school event. (Trevor Bothorel/CBC)

In 2019, a record 53.6 million million tonnes of e-waste was dumped worldwide,according to a report from the United Nations.

UN data also shows Canada generated 20.2 kilograms of e-waste per capita that year. But in 2016, Canadaonly formally collected 2.8 kilograms per capita.

"Every family generates a lot of electronic waste and we don't really realize it," Crowellsaid.

His school's projectteachesstudents an important lesson, but it's not all serious business.

"I think the most fun part about doing this is probablyripping apart everything," said Grade 6 student Bailey George.

Worth its weight in gold

It's not just Crowell's students who understand the value of e-waste.

In 2015, University of Saskatchewan chemistry professor Stephen Foley andhis grad students began lookingat more effective ways to recover gold, instead of mining it. The team decided to recyclethe element from electronic waste.

A UN report notes thatannually,approximately $21 billionworth of gold and silver goes into the manufacturing of electronics like phones and tablets worldwide.

Stephen Foley, far right, with Graham Fritz, far left, and graduate students Loghman Moradi and Hiwa Salimi during their pitch at a taping of Dragons' Den in 2018. (Sony Pictures Television/CBC)

The group's work resulted in the creation of a solvent to extract gold from electronics. The team was so successful that they created a company out of the project and received additional investment after a successful pitch on the CBCshow Dragons' Den in 2018.

"If you can monetize the waste stream, then you really have a chance to recycle itI think," said Foley. "If it's costing more to recycle it than it is to mine new gold, then [recycling is]probably not going to happen as a viable form."

No small effort to reuse e-waste

Gayleen Creelman, the program director for theElectronic Products Recycling Association in Saskatchewan,says since the program began in the province in 2007, people in the province have recycledapproximately 37,000 tonnes of e-waste.

Creelman says per capita, that's roughlyon track with the rest of country, but she noted recycling regulations vary province to province.

Processing facilities break down electronic waste that's collected at facilities in Saskatchewan. The waste is then reused for new items. (EPRA Saskatchewan)

One tonne of copper can be produced from just 14tonnes of e-waste, compared to 80,000 tonnesof raw material mined from the ground,according to Creelman.

The electronics recycling association, which operates regulated electronic recycling programs across the country, takes e-waste from recycling collection centres, such as SARCAN in Saskatchewan, and sends it to processing facilities.

"We take the copper and the palladium and the steel and the aluminum, the plastics and glass and that does get reused, so it's very circular in that respect," said Creelman.

"But encouraging the reuse of [a]device in its current form is what we really promote as well."

According to the association, there are 108 e-waste collection locations in the province, which include retailers like Staples and Best Buy.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said there are 30 e-waste collections sites in the province. In fact, there are 108.
    May 30, 2022 10:42 AM CT

With files from Trevor Bothorel