[LINK] World University Rankings, 2011 (E-Waste)
Philip Argy
pargy at argystar.com
Fri May 6 17:38:27 AEST 2011
They have devised a physical and chemical process which maximises the
concentration/recovery of precious metals, and have achieved a yield of over
90%, enabling them to process eWaste onshore and export only ingots of
precious metals at high value, unlike people such as Sims who do little more
than export container loads of shredded waste for offshore processing.
Philip
-----Original Message-----
From: Marghanita da Cruz [mailto:marghanita at ramin.com.au]
Sent: Friday, May 06, 2011 10:02 AM
To: pargy at argystar.com
Cc: link at anu.edu.au; oz-teachers at rite.ed.qut.edu.au;
oztl_net at listserv.csu.edu.au
Subject: Re: [LINK] World University Rankings, 2011 (E-Waste)
Philip Argy wrote:
> These guys in Melbourne are leading the world in eWaste recovery yields:
> http://www.pgmrefiners.com/
E-Waste is pretty broad, I did reference them but can you elaborate on
how/what aspect they lead the world in?
Marghanita
> -----Original Message-----
> From: link-bounces at mailman.anu.edu.au
> [mailto:link-bounces at mailman.anu.edu.au] On Behalf Of Marghanita da
> Cruz
> Sent: Thursday, May 05, 2011 10:08 AM
<snip>
> Collection and "the reverse supply chain", rather than processing of
> e-scrap, seems to be the obstacle to converting E-Waste.
> <http://ramin.com.au/itgovernance/green-ICT-e-waste.shtml>
>
<snip>
--
Marghanita da Cruz
http://ramin.com.au
Tel: 0414-869202
More information about the Link
mailing list