image retrieved from metechrecycling.com
Two articles from The Denver Post, published nearly two years apart, offer very different frames in their coverage of Metech Recycling, an urban mining company.
Metech takes unwanted computers, televisions, and other electronic devices, disassembles them, and salvages materials such as aluminum, copper, and even small amounts of gold. In addition to their Denver plant, the company also has plants in other states such as California and Massachusetts.
A Jan. 2010 article by Jordan Steffen, takes an environmental approach and frames Metech as a company that is striving to keep harmful materials out of our landfills, “Once a television or other electronic device is unplugged and dumped, it can turn into a toxic hazard filled with materials such as lead, mercury and arsenic.”
The company is cited for its positive impact on the environment. The article also speaks to the potential hazards of dumping electronics in the garbage, “There has been growing concern among state and federal environmental agencies about those old TVs, monitors and gadgets because they pose a contamination threat to soil and groundwater.”
So the frame of the article is largely based on environmental impacts: keeping harmful materials out of landfills and groundwater, and less mining for new materials. In addition, Steffen notes that, at the time of the article, 50%-70% of electronics that are collected for recycling in the US, end up being shipped overseas into low income parts of foreign countries, where they don’t have the safety tools and equipment to safely handle materials such as mercury and lead. Steffen alludes to the e-waste problem that still plagues a lot of foreign communities.
video by CBS News
But a more recent Denver Post article by Bruce Finley, frames Metech a little differently. He also acknowledges Metech’s environmental responsibility but instead focuses on the strong financial potential in the business of recycling electronics.
“The disassembly-line workers hammering, drilling, snipping and shredding in a north Denver warehouse each morning are pioneers in new urban mining. End product: gold, silver, copper, aluminum,” Finley writes.
He also cites the greater difficulties of mining the earth for new materials in comparison to the more financially feasible process of recycling electronic components. He quotes EPA’s regional administrator Jim Martin as saying, “Building a mine these days is a process that takes years, a process that requires us to build in all kinds of safeguards to make sure we're protecting water and air quality. This is far cheaper, faster and easier."
Finley’s article also points out how recycling in controlled environments such as Metech has benefits for the workers performing the actual labor. “Traditional mining to extract minerals from deep underground pays as little as $35 a month and releases toxic pollution that poisons people, said Noah Amoah, 42, referring to gold mines in his native Ghana.”
Finley also stresses the jobs being created and sustained as a result of Metech
“Over two years, jobs have grown here and at 30 other certified "e-steward" plants nationwide.”
Economics is stressed more than environmentalism.
What does this shift in tone between the two articles imply? Perhaps it shows how just 2 years ago, it was still a bit of a struggle to convince people that recycling their unwanted electronics was necessary. In the time, since then, maybe urban mining has become more accepted as a worthwhile goal.
Beyond the scope of these two Denver Post articles, it seems there are more stories that future journalists can expand upon. Finley briefly mentions that currently there are no US smelting plants that can process the aluminum, and gold that companies like Metech salvage from old electronics.
“No major metal smelters are available in the U.S. because of environmental controls. Smelting companies in Canada, Denmark and Japan capture that part of the growing business,” Finley writes.
Articles that probe further into the smelting industry, which is getting increased business from companies like Metech, might be of interest since there are both environmental and monetary implications.








