Mining Cell Phones for Gold
What's better than taking a pick and shovel
to a mountain of gold ore? Mining a mountain of cell phones for
the gold and other minerals they contain. It is economically
viable and much better for the environment than a typical mining
operation. There's even a way for you to cash in.
There's Gold in Them Thar Cell Phones
Gold
is not just for rings, coins and ingots stored at the Federal
Reserve Bank. It's a natural element with excellent properties
for electronics. Gold is a good conductor of electricity, better
than copper or aluminum. It's also a good conductor of heat and
very malleable. It can be made into extremely thin foils or plated
onto other metals to improve their conductivity. Gold doesn't
oxidize the way other common metals do. Gold plated connectors
and switch contacts will maintain low resistance connections
even in humid atmospheres. That's why you'll find gold in nearly
every electronic product, including cell phones.
Now don't expect to crack open an old cell
phone and find it gleaming like a polished nugget. Gold is used
sparingly for plating contacts and in bonding wires within the
integrated circuits. Computer circuit boards have far more gold.
Exotic military and space equipment might be rich with it.
The Half-Billion Motherlode
The reason for focusing on cell phones is that there is a huge
untapped mother lode out there sitting in drawers, closets and
basement storage. It's estimated that there may be as many as
half a billion unused cell phones in storage. Where do they all
come from? People upgrading to new phones as they change service.
A typical cell phone is used for 18 months and then discarded
when service is terminated or transferred to a newer, snazzier
model. About 100 million phones will get disconnected this year
alone. Some are donated to recycling drives, a few are resold
privately, and too many are simply thrown into the trash. Most
are still lying dormant because their owners perceive them to
have value but don't know to extract it.
Professionals do know how to extract the
hidden value in old cell phones, and in more ways than you might
think. Newer high tech models can be refurbished and resold.
Even common late model phones are in demand in third world countries,
where individuals can't necessarily afford brand new cell phones
and wireless service is more available than landlines. Other
phones can be set up as 911 emergency-only phones and given out
by the police to people who want them for security.
Why Mining Old Phones Makes Sense
What about cell phones that are much older or damaged? This is
where the gold mining comes in. Obsolete phones are disassembled
and processed to remove the gold and other precious metals. Also
recovered and reused are plastics, glass, lead, cadmium and other
materials. Some of these materials, particularly lead, cadmium,
arsenic and mercury are environmental hazards and could become
a real toxic waste problem if hundreds of millions of phones
wind up in landfills. Recycling at the raw material level generates
enough revenue to make the recovery process a viable commercial
operation on a large scale. It provides materials for future
manufacturing needs and keeps toxic waste out of the environment.
Your Opportunity To Cash-In on the Cellular
Gold Rush
So how do you cash in? Not by trying to disassemble your old
phone to extract some minute amounts of valuable minerals. That
phone you've recently taken out of service may still have some
value left. It may even be worth more than you paid for it if
you got a rebate deal with your service. The way to find out
is to check
the value of your phone with a major cell phone recycler.
Send it in with the prepaid mailing box they provide, and once
they verify it works properly you'll get a check.
Even if your phone is too old to have a
monetary value, you'll feel better about properly recycling the
components than adding to an already serious problem with toxic
electronics waste.
