Thrown in the trash or left abandoned in a drawer, the fate of mobile phones --- which consumers replace on average every two years -- is starting to change amid growing criticism over their environmental impact.
"People love technology -- the upgrades, the unboxing, the new features," the EEB network of environmental groups in Europe said in a statement as the world's largest mobile phone fair opened this week in Barcelona.
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"But there's a dirty side to our tech obsession: trainloads of e-waste trundling out of our cities and towards hellish waste dumps in Africa and Asia."
According to a recent UN report, small devices like smartphones represented nine per cent of all e-waste in the world in 2016, up from seven per cent in 2014.
But things in the mobile sector are slowly starting to change."There is very strong growth in the reused phone market," said Bertrand Grau, a technology analyst at Deloitte, which forecasts sales of second-hand mobile phones will expand by 20 per cent a year between 2015 and 2020.
The surge in sales of secondhand phones -- which may just need a change of battery or screen -- is being fuelled in part by consumers, who are reluctant to dish out more money for new models that offer little innovation.
"Phones are becoming more and more expensive, more than 1,000 euros for the iPhone X, but the established brands are attractive so people prefer to buy a refurbished Apple phone rather than a cheaper Chinese brand," said Grau.
As such, mobile brands and operators are increasingly offering phone exchange programmes. Consumers can turn in their old model to get a discount on a new one or cash.
"Today this has become almost a mainstream practice around the world," said Biju Nair, the head of Hyla, a Texas-based firm which helps the industry collect and repurpose used phones and had a stand at Barcelona's Mobile World Congress.
Hyla and other such firms provide operators with software that checks the state of the phone, makes sure it was not stolen, erases all the data on the device and makes it reusable.
French start-up Volpy, meanwhile, has created an app that buys phones directly from consumers and sends a courier to fetch the handset.
"We realised that smartphones that had significant market value were not recycled, even though there was an interest for consumers to do so," said Volpy head Marc Simeoni.
The system is still in its infancy. Only 7 to 15 per cent of smartphones sold in France, and 20 to 25 per cent of those sold in North America, are reconditioned.
But "it's the first step to responsibly handling phones," said Elizabeth Jardim, an e-waste specialist with the US branch of Greenpeace.
"We advise to keep the phones in use for longer, whether it is the original owner, or whether it's a second-hand owner" since this reduces the amount of energy and raw materials used to make a new one, she added.
A smartphone is made up of about 50 different materials, including rare materials that are sometimes extracted from nations in conflict like the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Manufacturing smartphones also requires a huge amount of energy, often fossil fuels since 60 per cent of them are made in China where coal remains the main source of energy.
And only about 20 per cent of all e-waste -- defined as anything with a plug or a battery -- is going in the official collection and recycling schemes, according to a UN report.
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"One thing that makes it difficult is the way the phones are designed. They're incredibly fragile, for instance, the glass they use for the display. Often, the phones are designed to be difficult to be repaired," said Jardim.
Faced with these problems, efforts by major brands remain slim.
Technology giant Apple said last year it wants to "one day" end the need to mine materials from the earth to make its gadgets. It has melted down iPhone aluminum enclosures to make minicomputers used in its factories.
And under pressure from Greenpeace, Samsung agreed to recycle the Galaxy Note 7 smartphones it was forced to recall in 2016 because of problems with its battery.
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