Each & Every country has a recycling problem of electronic scrap... see some electronic scrap photos from china 
Sorting
Circuit boards, which can contain tiny amounts of gold and silver, are treated with acid baths.
Mountain of Waste
The city of Guiyu is home to 5,500 businesses devoted to processing discarded electronics, known as e-waste. According to local websites, the region dismantles 1.5 million pounds of junked computers, cell phones and other devices a year.
Specialized
The niche industry employs tens of thousands of people, many of them in small, family-run workshops.

Extraction
The ewaste is mined for the lead, gold, copper and other metals that are found in the circuit boards, wiring, chips and other parts of electronic devices. In this photo, a worker heats a computer board on a steel surface to remove the computer chips soldered into it.

Huge Supply
Almost 80% of the discarded electronics come from overseas, including the United States

Details
Guiyu — and places like it in India and Africa — fluorish because it is far cheaper to break down e-waste there than it is in the developing world, where companies must follow strict guidelines.

Drilling
According to Guiyu's own website, the e-waste business generates $75 million a year for the town.

Workshops
Health reports from the region say that Guiyu's children suffer from an extremely high rate of lead poisoning.

Piled Up
A worker throws a computer casing onto a pile.

Hard Work
According to reports from nearby Shantou University, Guiyu has the highest level of cancer-causing dioxins in the world and an elevated rate of miscarriages.

Carting
A worker hauls phone casings on a tricycle. Despite the dangers it presents, the e-waste business in Guiyu continues to thrive.




















