Comparison site
Moneysupermarket.com
is launching
National
Recycle Your Phone Week on 27 October in a bid to stem the tide of mobile
handsets being tossed into landfill sites.
According to the site's research, eight out of 10 people have more than one
old phone and only a third of those that are discarded are recycled.
This equates to 1.5 million handsets, which contain hazardous chemicals such
as lead, cadmium and mercury, finding their way to landfill sites rather than
recycling centres.
Some have also pointed the finger at businesses that do not recycle old
mobiles, despite usually replacing phones in bulk when business contracts are
renewed across the organisation.
"People regularly upgrade their phones to the latest model even though their
old handset may be in good working order," said James Parker, manager of mobiles
and broadband at Moneysupermarket.com.
"It is this need for the latest gadget which has resulted in people
accumulating so many spare phones, particularly the younger generation."
The study revealed that the average Briton has two old handsets, with 32 per
cent planning to keep hold of their old handsets as a backup or to give to
friends and family.
The average teenager now owns three mobiles, but only a fifth of those
surveyed said they plan to recycle any of them.
One in six respondents claimed that they did not know how to recycle old
mobile phones or did not even know they could, while one in 10 said that they
would prefer to sell their old phones, yet the price paid for recycling old
handsets can amount to just as much as selling them.
National Recycle Your Phone Week will run from 27 October until 2 November in
partnership with
love2recycle.com
which will pay an average of £25 per recycled phone, up to £150 depending on the
handset.
To mark the launch of the campaign Moneysupermarket.com commissioned a giant
phone to be made out of old handsets, which now stands in Golden Square in
central London.
"We hope National Recycle Your Phone Week will raise awareness and really
encourage people to recycle old phones for the benefit of the environment as
well as gaining a bit of extra cash," concluded Parker.
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