Permalink: https://www.media.greenpeace.org/archive/Rubbish-and-E-Waste-in-River-in-Ghana-27MZIFLRNPJI.htmlConceptually similarPlaying Football in GhanaGP01IJOCompleted★★★★Playing Football in GhanaGP01ME6Completed★★★★Playing Football in GhanaGP01ME7Completed★★★★Playing Football in GhanaGP01IJNCompleted★★★★Boy Scavenging a Waste Pile in GhanaGP01MEFCompleted★★★★Monitor Casings in a Lagoon in GhanaGP01IJJCompleted★★★★Computer Monitor Casing in GhanaGP01IJICompleted★★★★Broken Pieces of Monitors in GhanaGP01MDFCompleted★★★★Broken Pieces of Monitors in GhanaGP01MDGCompleted★★★★View AllGP01IJQRubbish and E-Waste in River in GhanaRubbish, including electronic waste, dumped in the river. Ghana has few, if any, facilities to properly recycle electronic waste.Locations:Accra-Agbogbloshie Market-Ghana-Western AfricaDate:11 Apr, 2008Credit:© Greenpeace / Kate DavisonMaximum size:3504px X 2336pxKeywords:Day-Dumping-Electronic waste-KWCI (GPI)-Outdoors-Rivers-Toxic waste-Toxics (campaign title)-Waste disposalShoot:Toxics E-Waste Documentation in GhanaGreenpeace visits Ghana to investigate workplace contamination from e-waste recycling and disposal in the country and uncovers evidence that e-waste is being exported, often illegally, to Ghana from Europe and the US. The majority of second-hand electrical goods that are exported to Ghana from developed countries are beyond repair and are either dumped or "recycled" in a crude fashion.In the yards, unprotected workers, many of them children, dismantle computers and TVs with little more then stones in search of metals that can be sold. The remaining plastic, cables and casing is either burnt or simply dumped. Some of the samples tested by Greenpeace contained toxic metals including lead in quantities as much as one hundred times above background levels. Other chemicals such as phthalates, some of which are known to interfere with sexual reproduction, were found in most of the samples tested. One sample also contained a high level of chlorinated dioxins, known to promote cancer.Greenpeace is campaigning to pressurize the producers of electronic goods to remove the hazardous chemicals from their goods and to become more responsible for end-of-life products.Related Collections:Toxics E-Waste Documentation in Ghana (photos & videos)