Honest 836 Report post Posted December 31, 2008 Nokia India announces ‘Take Back’ Indiatimes Infotech l 31 Dec l New Delhi Nokia India has said that it will launch its 'take-back' campaign from January 1. The take-back campaign is aimed at educating mobile phone users on the importance of recycling e-waste and will be rolled out in phases across the country. As a part of this initiative, Nokia encourage mobile phone users to dispose their used handsets and accessories such as charges and handsets, regardless of the brand, at any of the recycling bins set up across Nokia Priority Dealers and Nokia Care Centers. A Nokia survey across 13 countries has showed that only a mere 17 per cent of the cellular users in India were aware that the handset could be recycled. The awareness quotient was the lowest in India. "The company will be planting a tree for every handset dropped into these recycling bins and giving out a surprise gift as well," Nokia said in a statement. The highlight of the survey was that despite the fact that people on an average each owned around five phones; very few of these were being recycled once they are no longer used. Only 3 per cent said they had recycled their old phone. Instead the majority, 44 per cent, are simply being kept at homes and never used. Others are giving their mobiles another life in different ways, passing on their old phones to friends or family or by selling their used devices. Globally, half of those surveyed didn't know phones could be recycled like this, with awareness lowest in India at 17 per cent and Indonesia at 29 per cent, and highest in the UK at 80 per cent and 66 per cent in Finland and Sweden. "The take-back campaign aims to increase awareness of the concept of recycling. If people no longer need their mobile devices, they can bring it back to Nokia for recycling and it can put it to good use - 100 percent of the materials in the phones can be recovered and used to make new products or generate energy," the company statement added. According to Nokia India's VP and managing director D Shivakumar, the campaign offered the company an unique opportunity to make an impact that goes beyond its own business. "Our vision is a world where everyone being connected can contribute to sustainable development. As responsible leaders, we want to drive best practices in our industry. Achieving environmental leadership means minimising our own environmental footprint and encouraging recycling is a step in this direction," he added. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
srk006 21 Report post Posted December 31, 2008 Nice initiative. I already have 3 mobiles ready to be scraped. Btw, will we get some compensation? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sumatrix 1 Report post Posted December 31, 2008 Nice initiative. I already have 3 mobiles ready to be scraped. Btw, will we get some compensation? they need to think about the compensation package too. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ashoksoft 83 Report post Posted December 31, 2008 Across the world this is available .. and normally there is no compensation but a small discount from the manufacturer on a new handset depending on the recyclable content in the phone being scraped! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ravi_patent 28 Report post Posted January 1, 2009 (edited) the discount offered may be small,but recycling is a lucrative proposition Edited January 1, 2009 by ravi_patent Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
@ksh@T 20 Report post Posted January 1, 2009 without compensation no one will give up! . . . .its india not other countries. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Himanshu Singh 19 Report post Posted January 1, 2009 Good intentions. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites