Unwanted Mobile Phone Turns into Cash with Recycling! | The Communication Blog

Friday, August 12, 2011

Unwanted Mobile Phone Turns into Cash with Recycling!

By George Carrol


If today 10 people are asked about five essential things they cannot live without, it could be said for sure that 9 out of those 10 people would take the name of mobile phones. From this, it could be concluded that today, mobiles have become an indispensable part and parcel of people's lives. There are also examples where people have been quoted saying that they go completely handicapped without that little electronic device in their bags. However, these people cannot be denied. With the pace at which technology is advancing, and the ever decreasing life expectancy, people today have taken up this mode of communication to keep in touch with their close ones. Technology changes over time and the older ones get replaced by the latest models. So, what about the old ones? It's simple. Just opt to recycle phones.

It is estimated that in the UK, there are about 90 million mobile phones that are unused, finding themselves in drawers and on shelves. Staggeringly, these devices collectively are worth something around 450. Why not recycle phones that are old, and remain abandoned at home? Mobile phones are made up of materials which take years to decompose, exposing harmful products onto the ground. But today there's an added incentive. Through phone exchange or recycling, a person can acquire a new, latest model of mobile phone like those of the Mazuma mobiles and the Envirofones. Is that not a great option?

What happens when a mobile phone is recycled?
Two things can take place when mobile phones are sent off for recycling:
1. It is sent away often to developing countries, to be used again
2. It is broken down for components useful to nature
Most of recycled phones are refurbished. They're often resold in developing countries like India and China. Conversely, they might as well be used as replacement ones by insurance companies in the UK.

Approximately 5% of phones which are sent in for recycling are beyond rescue. These handsets are broken down and their components are mined. It is surprising, yet true that mobile phones contain several metals which could be reused as gold, silver, copper nickel and as rare as platinum. Plastics, which also form a basic component of mobiles, too, are melted down at times and used for items like traffic cones.

What else can be acquired apart from saving the environment?
If a person requires more incentive to send the phone in for recycling, they can consider the cash that they get back for their old handsets. Usually, the more features a phone has and the greater is the popularity of the brand, the higher goes the price. For instance, the price of these mobile phones could range from 15 over 250. However, Nokia handsets top the list of the recycled phone market in the UK, because of their popularity. This does not imply that to recycling phones of other companies does not come for a premium. Of course it does. Go ahead and recycle phones today.




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