This is a TV program Perry should love

Austin American-Statesman
Editorial Board

People of a certain age come to realize that marketing boasts of “new and improved” sometimes come attached to products that really are not all that new and perhaps not all that improved. The most new and improved thing on that allegedly new and improved mouthwash might be the label on the bottle.

But there are times when new and improved are precisely the right words for a product. We are living in one of those times. Anybody who has traded in the old big-box TV for a sleek new high-def flat screen understands that we are dealing with a technology that truly is new and improved — and increasingly affordable.

Hail to progress (and football in HD). But what becomes of the old TVs?

The statistics are overwhelming. There are as many as 100 million older, unused televisions sitting around in homes of Americans. (We understand the emotional attachment some of us develop for our trusty TVs.) Older sets can be difficult, and potentially hazardous, to get rid of. There are estimates that 25 million TVs a year are disposed of in the U.S. Only about 20 percent are recycled.

Those numbers show why Senate Bill 329 by Kirk Watson, D-Austin, is such a good idea. The official analysis accompanying the measure by Watson succinctly captures the problem: “This massive amount of electronic waste threatens to overwhelm available landfill space.” What’s worse is the environmental reality that these older TVs contain lead components that can become public health hazards if not properly disposed.

SB 329 would establish a television recycling program requiring manufacturers to take back and recycle a percentage of TVs, based on their Texas market share. A similar program is in effect for computers. It’s time — past time — for a similar program for TVs. So far in the legislative process, most everyone agrees, including the electronics industry. The House last week approved the bill in a 148-0 vote. Back in March, it won 29-2 Senate approval.

At the Senate committee hearing on the bill, there was an impressive and diverse list of witnesses in support of the bill (representing environmental groups, electronics industry organizations, the Texas Baptist Christian Life Commission and others) and nobody testifying against it.

The bill now goes back to the Senate for consideration of changes made in the House. We trust those differences can be worked out and the measure can win final approval prior to the May 30 end of the regular session.

“It’s not just our environment that benefits, this program would also save local taxpayers money,” said Stacy Guidry, Austin program director for Texas Campaign for the Environment. “We applaud the manufacturers for taking responsibility for recycling old TVs. Our tax dollars should not be spent to subsidize handing this waste.”

Final approval would mean the bill needs one more vote — that of Gov. Rick Perry, who vetoed similar legislation two years ago.

“Texas has repeatedly proven that wise incentives can accomplish environmental progress with far greater success than burdensome mandates, fees, regulations and extensive reporting requirements,” Perry said in his 2009 veto message that complained about “new fees on both manufacturers and recyclers” that “generate unfair results and stifle competition.”

This year’s version includes a change we hope will get Perry on board. TV manufacturers, instead of paying an annual $2,500 fee and collecting their market-share-based number of TVs for recycling, could choose to form “Recycling Leadership Programs” that would include 200 sites or events for the collection of TVs to be recycled. No fee would be required.

Perry should sign SB 329. It doesn’t take a high-def screen to see that this is a good idea for our state.


Environmental groups sue Lower Colorado River Authority

Austin Business Journal

Three anti-pollution groups have accused the Lower Colorado River Authority of committing 10,000 violations against the federal Clean Air Act.

The groups— Environmental Integrity Project, Environment Texas and the Texas Campaign for the Environment— warned the Central Texas provider Thursday that they plan to file a lawsuit for alleged infractions at its coal-fired power plant near LaGrange in Fayette County. Two of the plants three units are partly-owned by Austin Energy.

The lawsuit trails a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency decision to overhaul the state’s Flexible Air Permitting rules, under which the Fayette Power Project and 121 other Texas plants operate. The agency has proposed striking down the rules, saying the violate the Clean Air Act.

“The Fayette power plant is a prime example of an air pollution program that puts polluters ahead of public health,” TCE Director Robin Schneider said.

The groups have delivered a notice of intent to sue to LCRA, saying the company is violating the Act’s “New Source Review” by elevating production without making required pollution control upgrades. The groups also allege LCRA owes the state about $500,000 worth in pollution fees for under-reporting its emissions.


New report ranks Texas last in recycling old computers

Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Teresa McUsic

Don’t know what to do with your old computer? You’re not alone.

In 2009, Texas ranked dead last in per capita collections of old computers among the seven states that require manufacturers to take back old equipment from consumers, according to a report released this week by the Texas Campaign for the Environment Fund. Click here to read the report.

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It’s the first data available since the state’s computer take-back law took effect in 2008, and it shows that computer manufacturers recovered about 15 million pounds of their old electronics in Texas, or slightly more than 1/2 pound per person. In comparison, Minnesota collected almost 3 pounds of computer equipment per person in the first year of its program, plus more than 3 pounds of televisions and other electronic equipment, called e-waste.

“The Texas law is very specific and very limited to just individual home-based computers,” said Jeffrey Jacoby, TCE Fund program director in Dallas.

Some states also require manufacturers to take back electronic equipment from small businesses, small nonprofits and school districts that use their brands, Jacoby said. Oregon, Washington and Rhode Island require firms to set up collection sites in every county and city with 10,000 people or more.

In total, 20 states and New York City have either active or pending take-back laws for electronics, Jacoby said.*

In Texas, Round Rock-based computer maker Dell dominated the state’s computer take-back program last year, collecting almost 85 percent of the total.

Dell’s program was more effective than those of other manufacturers because it developed a partnership with Goodwill Industries and retailer Staples. Through the Dell Reconnect program, Goodwill accepts at no cost any brand of computer from consumers at its outlets statewide. Staples accepts Dell computers at its Texas locations at no charge. (The retailer will take back other brands for a $10 recycling fee.)

Most other computer manufacturers fulfill their obligations in Texas by offering a no-cost mail-back program in which consumers request or print out a mailing label, receive shipping materials and drop off their old computer at a shipping service. Jacoby said this method has been less effective, resulting in poor showings by the manufacturers on their recycling efforts.

For example, Hewlett-Packard reclaimed 4.6 percent of the state’s total, or around 688,000 pounds of its equipment last year, Jacoby said. HP had a drop-off program with Staples through the first half of last year but canceled it and used the mail-back option the rest of the year.

“The bare-bones Texas legislation evidently didn’t inspire companies to get out there and recycle our old electronic junk the same way other state laws did,” Jacoby said.

Tarrant County residents have multiple ways to drop off any brand of computer, along with any other household electronics, through Goodwill Industries of Fort Worth, said Ray Jones, senior vice president of electronic technology and refurbishing.

“We have a pretty big program with Dell,” Jones said. “In the first four months of this year alone, we’ve processed and recycled more than 624,000 pounds of computer components.”

Goodwill also partners with the cities of Fort Worth, Arlington, Denton and Grand Prairie to recycle any electronics that consumers bring to their dump sites, Jones said. That arrangement costs the city nothing for its e-waste recycling and allows Goodwill to expand its collection efforts beyond its 17 area stores.

Other drop-off stations in the Goodwill program include Arlington’s landfill at 800 Mosier Valley Road and three sites in Fort Worth: 5150 Martin Luther King Jr. Freeway, 2400 Brennan Ave. and 6260 Old Hemphill Road.

“It’s no charge to consumers, and they’ll get a donation receipt from us,” Jones said.

Jones said his staff will erase the computer’s hard drive of any stored data three times before refurbishing or recycling it.

“If we can’t do it electronically, we’ll drill a hole through the hard drive,” he said. Dell also randomly inspects recycled items to make sure information is deleted, Jones added.

Much of the old equipment is resold through Goodwill stores, Jones said. If it can’t be refurbished, it is torn down to its components and distributed to recyclers. Metal from computers, flash drives and monitors is sent back to Dell, which pays Goodwill a processing fee.

Lack of awareness of electronic-recycling programs is a big problem, said Kim Mote, Fort Worth’s assistant director of environmental management.

“A lot of people hold on to their old electronics,” he said. “They’re not sure what to do with them.”

But enough are getting dumped to make it the nation’s fastest-growing consumer waste stream, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

“There are a lot of hazardous materials in electronics,” Mote said. “Older monitors have a lot of lead in their cabinets. Computers have plastic flame-resistant chemicals that break down. There’s cadmium and mercury. They come into landfills and get crushed and broken down, buried and then can leach into the soil and groundwater. It’s stuff you don’t want in our landfills.”

The TCE Fund report recommends that the Legislature expand the law in 2011 to require manufacturers to take back equipment from small businesses and school districts as well as add a TV take-back requirement. A bill for TVs was passed in 2009 but vetoed by Gov. Rick Perry.

*One point of clarification: twenty states plus NYC already passed their legislation (though not all twenty have implemented the program yet), with an additional nine considering takeback legislation this year.


Austin should nix plastic bags, group says

bagthebags1Austin American-Statesman
Sarah Coppela

A group of environmental advocates wants the City of Austin to ban plastic bags, saying the bags are an environmental scourge and that retailers have not substantially reduced the use of the bags through a voluntary program.

Facing the threat of a plastic bag ban, six large retailers — H-E-B, Randalls, Wal-Mart, Target, Walgreens and Whole Foods — agreed in 2008 to try to voluntarily reduce, by 50 percent, the plastic bags sent to landfills by June 2009. Whole Foods stopped offering plastic bags in spring 2008.

From January 2008 to June 2009, the retailers reduced the pounds of plastic bags they purchased by 27 percent, increased the amount they recycled by 42 percent, reduced the amount they sent to landfills by 38 percent, and sold about 907,000 reusable bags, according to data compiled by the Texas Retailers Association.

Those numbers haven’t swayed the Austin Zero Waste Alliance, a group of environmental advocates that will ask city leaders today to consider a plastic bag ban.

“They’re still putting far more bags into the waste stream than they’re recycling, and more needs to be done,” said Robin Schneider, executive director of Texas Campaign for the Environment and a member of the alliance.

The alliance wants a ban to be phased in over six months but is flexible about when it would take effect and whether all retailers or just large retailers would have to comply, Schneider said. Paper bags made of at least 40 percent recycled content would be exempt from the ban, she said.

Plastic bags choke wildlife, pollute waterways, clog sewers and drainage systems, and take up landfill space, where they don’t biodegrade, she said. The City of Austin has a “zero waste” goal of dramatically reducing the trash sent to landfills by 2040. But it’s not clear whether there is enough support among City Council members for a plastic bag ban.

Mayor Lee Leffingwell said Monday that he wouldn’t rule out a ban but thought the voluntary program did reduce plastic bag use. Other council members didn’t return calls or said they’d need to see more details about a possible ban.

H-E-B spokeswoman Leslie Lockett said, “We don’t believe that switching to paper bags is a better solution for the environment. They require more energy and fuel to produce and transport, they take up more landfill space, and they still take a long time to biodegrade.”

Other large retailers didn’t return calls Monday. Ronnie Volkening of the Texas Retailers Association said that group would prefer to see an expanded voluntary program and more marketing efforts to educate customers about using reusable bags. Several issues need to be studied before a ban is enacted, he said, such as the environmental effects of paper bags and whether it is practical to require all customers to forgo plastic.

San Francisco already has a plastic bag ban. In Texas, Brownsville has passed a plastic bag ban that will take effect in January 2011. The City of Austin collected plastic bags through a curbside collection pilot program offered to 5,000 households in 2008.

But the program had low participation, according to a city report. It cost $34,835 to carry out, but crews collected 7,793 pounds of plastic bags, which had a market value of only $1,170.


GHASP Takes On Toxic Chemicals In…Well, Just About Everything

Houston Press
Chris Vogel

Standing in front of an 20-foot-tall pseudo-rubber ducky, local public health advocates on Friday morning threw their support behind recently proposed federal legislation to update and upgrade the laws governing toxic chemicals used in consumer products.

“The Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976 regulates every chemical not found in food or medicine,” said Matthew Tejada, executive director of the Galveston-Houston Association for Smog Prevention. “That means construction materials, chemicals found in clothes, and even rubber duckies for kids. We effectively have no regulation of these chemicals, we don’t know what they are or what their effect on human health is.”

In April, legislators on Capitol Hill introduced reforms that would require companies to provide information about the chemicals they use to manufacture consumer products. It is the first attempt to revise the law since it was enacted in 1976. Tejada says the proposal would turn the current system on its head, no longer operating under the assumption that chemicals are safe until proven otherwise. On the flip side, chemicals in Europe are considered unsafe until the manufacturer proves that they are suitable for human contact.

“We want research and transparency on which chemicals are used and what the health effects are,” Tejada said. “Right now, almost none of them are researched and we don’t know what chemicals are used in which products. Companies are not required now to report this information.”

Said Zac Trahan of Texas Campaign for the Environment, “Babies are being born with chemicals in their blood that have never been tested. Chemicals from furniture and other household items are turning up in breast milk. The current system is broken.”

Nurse and mother Mary Hintikka agrees. “It’s very concerning when mothers don’t know what raising havoc with their children. This absolutely needs to change.”

Tejada said he hopes U.S. Congressman from Houston, Democrat Gene Green, whose district is full of chemical manufacturing plants, will support the proposed reforms.

“His district has the lowest percentage of people without health care coverage in the country,” said Tejada, “so we believe he and his district have the most to gain by safer products.”


Groups rally to guarantee public access to Texas coast

photoDaily Texan
Alex Geiser

Honks from cars and chants from people with Environment Texas and other organizations rang out in front of the state Capitol on Monday morning.

“Our beaches are so fine, let’s all vote for Prop 9,” the swimsuit-clad demonstrators chanted in a last-minute effort to promote a beach-front access amendment that will appear alongside 11 others on today’s ballot.

The proposition would add an amendment to the Texas Constitution guaranteeing public access to beaches on the Gulf of Mexico. The amendment is designed to strengthen the Open Beaches Act of 1959, which states that the land between the water and natural vegetation lies within the public domain.

Robin Schneider, the executive director of Texas Campaign for the Environment, said the amendment would guard against wealthy individuals buying up and blocking access to coastal land.

Problems arise when the shoreline creeps further up the beaches by natural causes, like hurricanes. As the water rises, the line of natural vegetation pushes back to a point where private property sometimes enters the public domain.

Landowners with property bordering natural vegetation on the coast are warned before purchase of potential economic loss should the shoreline rise. The state can sue landowners to re-appropriate the shoreline property if any of it enters the public domain and dwellings are not relocated.

State Rep. Mike Hamilton, R-Mauriceville, added an amendment to a homestead exemption bill related to Hurricane Ike during the summer’s special legislative session that enabled property owners to rebuild on the Bolivar Peninsula as long as the construction stays behind the vegetation line. But Schneider said the amendment violated the spirit of the Open Beaches Act.

“If land disappears because of erosion, they do not have indefinite right to it if it’s in the public domain,” Schneider said. “Open beaches belong to the public.”

State Rep. Wayne Christian, R-Center, owned a house on the Texas coast that was destroyed by hurricanes last year and said he wants to rebuild. His property, however, has now become part of the public domain because of the erosion of the shoreline. Christian, who opposes the proposition, said he supports open access to public beaches, but thinks that the language of the amendment is too broad.

“Placing this amendment in the constitution will provide the opportunity for the government to use a well-intentioned law to needlessly seize property and will close the door to further discussion of this important topic,” Christian said.

A. R. “Babe” Schwartz, a former state senator who helped pass the Open Beaches Act, said Hamilton’s amendment that allows people to rebuild on public property is unconstitutional and thus should not stand. Schwartz said there is confusion concerning whether people can rebuild on their land after hurricanes have pushed them into public land.

“It has been a constant issue,” he said. “They think they can [rebuild], but they cannot.”


Texas governor rejects TV recycling bill

HB821VetoProtest 075Green Right Now – ABC News
Harriet Blake

Texas Gov. Rick Perry surprised environmentalists, and others, when he recently vetoed the TV Take Back Bill (HB 821), which would have allowed Texans to recycle their outdated televisions for free as part of the necessary switch to digital TV.

It was a defeat for Texas environmentalists who not only had the support of local governments but TV manufacturers as well.

“We were in complete shock given the wide statewide support for the bill. We even had secured the endorsement of the industry lobbying group [the American Electronics Association],” said Jeff Jacoby of the Texas Campaign for the Environment (TCE).

In his veto, Gov. Perry acknowledged that the bill would make it easier for consumers to recycle old televisions but said “it does so at the expense of manufacturers, retailers and recyclers by imposing onerous new mandates, fees and regulations” and would also “generate unfair results and stifle competition.”

In a statement released Monday, the TCE noted that it didn’t seem so onerous to Austin lawmakers: The bill had no opposition and passed overwhelmingly in the House and unanimously in the Senate.

“HB 821 would have provided Texans free, convenient recycling for obsolete televisions,” said TCE staffer Zac Trahan.

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The TV Take Back bill would have operated much like an earlier measure, House Bill 2714, which passed in the last legislative session to regulate the recycling of computer equipment. That bill provided incentives to computer makers for taking back equipment from other companies, and did not allow for fees on the makers, sellers and recyclers of computers.

“Across the country, this (TV Take Back) is certainly not the most stringent mandate,” says Jacoby, who described the TV and computer programs as nearly identical. “It’s a market-based approach.”

Perry, however, said that before implementing such programs as the TV Take Back Bill, representatives and senators should have looked at voluntary recycling programs.

(Click here to read TCE’s response to Governor Perry’s veto.)


Zombie TVs Keep Walking

Austin Chronicle
Richard Whittaker

No one likes a bill they worked hard on to die, but there’s particular fury in the environmental community today that Gov. Rick Perry killed House Bill 821, the famous zombie TV recycling legislation. “Perry had no good reason to veto this bill,” Texas Campaign for the Environment Director Robin Schneider said.

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A Magnavox? This should go in a museum, not a landfill
Photo by Richard Whittaker

The bill got TV manufacturers into the recycling game: A particularly important issue since the digital switch made many sets unusable. Schneider’s already had the chance to challenge Perry on his veto. This morning, before a rally at the Capitol, she and some protesters headed to UT’s Volunteer Leadership Summit, where Perry was scheduled to speak. As she explained, she came out of the elevator and there was the gov. When she asked for an explanation, “He said this was an industry bill. Well, coming from Texas’ business-friendly Perry, that’s an interesting argument.”

Schneider is particularly frustrated because Perry struck the bill down even though it had wide-spread support (including big industry names like GE, Thomson, Philips and the TechAmerica trade association) that almost exactly mirrored the consensus-backing of the 2007 session’s computer recycling bill. “This bill uses the free market to let the companies come up with their recycling plans, and the fees were modest,” she lamented.

More importantly, Perry’s staff told her he was fine with it – right up to the point he vetoed it.


What Happens When You Kill Your TV

Dallas Observer
Kimberly Thorpe

At noon today in Victory Park, a group of enviro-activists dressed for Halloween dropped to the concrete to rather dramatically mark the end of analog television. The switch from analog to digital television was supposed to happen back in February but was delayed when an estimated 6 million U.S. household were unprepared for the switch. But time’s run out: The flip was switched, oh, ’bout 90 minutes ago.

As a result, the Texas Campaign for the Environment  — the group behind today’s Victory Park demonstration — estimates that 3 million televisions will be tossed out in Texas (about 20 to 80 million sets nationally). Since old television sets contain anywhere from four to eight pounds of lead, this is a hell of a lot of toxic waste to hit the environment at once.

“These zombies are here to serve as a reminder that trashing obsolete televisions is a toxic option that may come back to haunt us,” said program director Jeffrey Jacoby, as his zombie staff stood frozen behind him. “You don’t want these in your landfills,” he said, motioning toward the zombies. (And there’s a slide show from this forthcoming.)

The most environmentally conscious thing to do is always to reuse items rather than toss them. Local Radio Shacks confirm they’re still busy selling converters today, while Best Buy is offering to recycle old televisions up to 32 inches for $10.

Jacoby is calling on Governor Rick Perry to sign a bill passed in the Legislature to mandate more statewide recycling programs for used TVs, and “keep these old dead televisions from entering our landfills and water sources.”

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Photos: Kimberly Thorpe


Few Rules for Recycling Electronics

New York Times
Tom Zeller Jr.

NEW YORK — Jeffrey L. Nixon, the owner of an electronics-recycling company called EarthECycle, says he has been unfairly painted as a purveyor of electronic waste to developing nations already choking on the rich world’s discarded — and toxic — gadgetry.

Among other sorts of equipment reclamation, Mr. Nixon’s company, based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, offers an attractive fund-raising opportunity for charities. In return for the charities’ sponsoring and orchestrating of electronics recycling events in their local communities, during which consumers can drop off their old computers, keyboards, printers and the like, EarthECycle not only hauls away the equipment, it promises to pay cash — often in the tens of thousands of dollars, depending on how much equipment is collected — to the charitable organizers.
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He can do this, Mr. Nixon said, because he is able to resell the equipment — for reuse, repair or recycling of parts — on a bustling global market.

“Everybody wins all around,” Mr. Nixon told me in a phone call Friday.

Not everyone agrees. In a scathing report published early last week, the Basel Action Network, or BAN, an advocacy group based in Seattle that seeks to curb the exporting of electronic waste from the United States, argued that EarthECycle — and companies like it — falsely represent themselves as recyclers.

“The public all along is led to thinking they are doing a good deed, and that their old equipment is getting recycled,” the BAN report stated. “The reality,” the report continued, “is that this is a scam.”

Whether or not that’s true is an open question. BAN activists did quietly monitor two recent EarthECycle collection events in Western Pennsylvania, sponsored by two local humane societies. The group reported having observed computer equipment being hauled first to two warehouses and, some days later, having been loaded into seven oceangoing containers.

Those were later determined to be headed for ports in China and South Africa.

But the details — and the legality of it all — get tangled after that. Mr. Nixon emphatically denies doing anything wrong, insisting that he carefully scrutinizes buyers to make sure they are licensed and reputable. He also argues that groups like BAN are trying to corner the recycling market for their own network of accredited vendors.

Activists at BAN say that last charge is ludicrous and argue that Mr. Nixon’s company falsely portrays itself as a recycler, when in reality it simply passes the unexamined material downstream to the highest bidder.

Proper processing of discarded electronic equipment, they add — which can contain any number of toxic materials — could not be achieved within a business model that not only hauls away discarded electronics free but also pays organizations for the privilege.

BAN also suggests that Mr. Nixon’s shipments might have run afoul of local and international guidelines binding the recipient nations, as well as rules, adopted two years ago by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, governing the international movement of cathode-ray tubes — found in many old monitors and television sets. China, the group noted, turned back Mr. Nixon’s shipments when notified that they were on their way.

For his part, Mr. Nixon says that he is squared away with the E.P.A. and that he recalled the China shipments himself upon learning independently that his buyer might not be as reputable as he had thought. He also said he wished BAN had approached him to discuss its concerns before issuing its report.

“If somebody is outright grossly negligent, then you pull their pants down, bend them over and give them a spanking,” Mr. Nixon said. “But you don’t bring them out to the firing line for what might be only a potential offense.”

Whatever its specifics, the case is emblematic of a larger and oft-lamented truth attending the endless tide of consumer electronics coursing through the American waste stream — and one that works in favor, at least for the moment, of American brokers like Mr. Nixon: There really are precious few rules to break.

As noted in a report from the Government Accountability Office for the House Foreign Affairs Committee last August, the United States remains notoriously lax in its regulation of electronics waste and the business of shipping it overseas. “U.S. hazardous waste regulations have not deterred exports of potentially hazardous used electronics,” the report concluded.

Indeed, in what has become a well-documented problem, the stuff often ends up in developing countries where labor is cheap, and eager, underground economies subsist on harvesting whatever might be of value from the snarl of plastic, glass and metal.

Over the past several years, numerous documentary films and news reports have described the toxic ecosystems that develop as a result, where acrid plumes of smoke rise from circuit-board smelting pits, and children bustle amid a soup of dioxins and mercury leaking from mountains of smoldering electronic trash.

The Basel Convention, an international treaty drawn up in the late 1980s at the dawn of the e-waste boom and ultimately ratified by 169 nations, was designed to curb the international trade in electronics waste. A later amendment — signed by considerably fewer nations — restricted the movement of hazardous electronics waste from rich countries to poor ones.

Several countries — including those in the European Union — have incorporated the tenets of the Basel Convention and its amendment into national law. The United States, along with Haiti and Afghanistan, have thus far not ratified the Basel Convention.

“The ultimate solution would be to pass a really good federal bill that would require that all recyclers in the U.S. meet very high standards,” said Sarah Westervelt, the e-waste project coordinator at BAN, “and that the U.S. ratify the Basel Convention and its amendment.”

A federal e-waste bill, in fact, was put forward in Congress in May, but environmental advocates have lambasted an exception in the draft for equipment being shipped for “repair or refurbishment.” Such a loophole, they say, gives the green light to brokers like Mr. Nixon and creates a legal foundation for the very sort of murky, difficult-to-follow trafficking that feeds toxic slums in developing nations.

“This is now an industry-supported bill, but not one that has any support from the environmental community,” said Barbara Kyle, the national coordinator of the Electronics TakeBack Coalition, an advocacy group based in San Francisco that promotes environmentally conscious design and responsible recycling in the electronics industry. “It will not actually stop the kinds of exports that need to be stopped,” Ms. Kyle said. “It will simply relabel them as exports for refurbishment.”

In the absence of legislation, some electronics makers are formalizing restrictions of their own. Last month, Dell, the computer giant, won accolades from environmental advocates for formally banning the exporting of nonfunctioning equipment collected by its recycling programs.

Still, Dell’s pledge notwithstanding, the American e-waste export market remains largely open for business — and as far as Mr. Nixon is concerned, that is a good thing.

He said he supports the spirit of groups like BAN and the Basel Convention but that in their specifics, they throttle a lucrative market that brings work and useful electronics to people that might not otherwise have access.

The solution, he says, is to monitor more closely foreign companies that purchase and move the equipment downstream, to ensure that it is being handled properly. “We should maintain our moral and legal prowess,” Mr. Nixon said, “but we shouldn’t limit our ability to do world trade.”

Texas Campaign for the Environment is an active member of the Electronics TakeBack Coalition.