By Faridat Salifu
The global electronic waste (e-waste) problem has reached critical proportions, with new data from the United Nations’ 2024 Global E-Waste Monitor underscoring the urgency to address this fast-growing waste stream.
E-waste, which includes anything with a plug or battery, is now the world’s fastest-growing waste stream. Despite efforts to curb this environmental hazard, it continues to pose serious threats to health, climate, and the environment.
One of the more alarming trends highlighted in the report is the rapid growth of disposable e-cigarettes, commonly known as vapes. The vape market is projected to expand by 31% annually until 2030, with vape waste growing in tandem. U.S. PIRG Education Fund’s report found that Americans discard an estimated 4.5 disposable vapes every second.
These products, used for only a few days, often end up in landfills, contributing to a growing e-waste problem that lacks standardized recycling processes.
The environmental cost of vapes extends beyond landfill waste. The lithium batteries powering disposable vapes have serious environmental repercussions, yet recycling efforts for this element remain minimal. In 2022, vape batteries alone contained 286,000 pounds of lithium, but less than 5% of this was recovered for reuse.
Despite the technical feasibility of lithium recycling, it remains economically unviable under current conditions.
With dozens of countries enacting bans on disposable vapes, the U.S. is seeing momentum in addressing the issue, with 48 bills introduced across states to either ban or establish recycling programs for these products.
The report also reveals that small electronic devices, such as microwaves, vacuums, and Internet of Things gadgets, now account for one-third of global e-waste.
These smaller items may seem insignificant compared to larger appliances, yet they generate a staggering 45 billion pounds of waste annually. Only 12% of this waste is collected for recycling.
Manufacturers’ increasing reliance on disposable electronics, including the rise of unnecessary “smart” products, is driving this trend. Items like internet-enabled microwaves or smart toothbrushes not only end up in landfills but also contribute to the billions of pounds of e-waste that go unrecycled each year.
Phones, laptops, and other small IT equipment generate 11 billion pounds of e-waste globally, as tech manufacturers continue to pressure consumers into prematurely replacing functional devices.
A significant driver of this is the artificially limited lifespan of products, from software support expiration to restrictive repair policies. This planned obsolescence has led to massive amounts of waste, as seen in the anticipated fallout from Microsoft’s decision to end support for Windows 10, potentially sending 400 million PCs into the junkyard.
In the U.S., e-waste is now the fastest-growing part of municipal waste, with Americans discarding nearly 8 million tons of electronics each year. This translates to an astounding 500 pounds of e-waste every second, placing the U.S. second only to China in e-waste generation.
The report also highlights the critical shortage of recycled rare earth elements, which are essential for green technologies like electric vehicles and renewable energy systems.
Less than 1% of these elements come from recycled materials, with the vast majority being sourced from environmentally damaging extraction processes.
As demand for rare earth elements like neodymium and dysprosium continues to grow, recycling remains insufficient to meet the need, pushing companies toward even more destructive mining methods, including deep-sea extraction.
The UN report calls for immediate action to rethink how electronics are produced, emphasizing that products with non-replaceable batteries such as Apple’s AirPods are contributing to the waste crisis by locking valuable rare earth elements into a one-way trip to the landfill.
These materials, essential for the future of green technologies, are being lost to poor design choices that prioritize disposability over sustainability.
With the release of these alarming figures, momentum is building behind legislative efforts to tackle the e-waste crisis. In March, Oregon passed the nation’s strongest Right to Repair law, and similar measures will soon go into effect in California and Minnesota.
These laws aim to reduce e-waste by making it easier for consumers to repair their devices, extending the lifespan of electronics, and reducing the demand for new products.
As the world grapples with the mounting environmental and health risks posed by e-waste, the need for a comprehensive, global solution has never been more urgent.