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DUKAS_186299083_NUR
Train Travelers With Bicycles
Travelers with bicycles and luggage and other passengers wait at a platform of Stuttgart Central Station in Stuttgart, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany, on June 20, 2025. A regional train of the ''Go-Ahead'' operator is visible in the background. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186299073_NUR
Train Travelers With Bicycles
A traveler with a bicycle and luggage and other passengers wait at a platform of Stuttgart Central Station in Stuttgart, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany, on June 20, 2025. A regional train of the ''Go-Ahead'' operator is visible in the background. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_14780605_EYE
dukas 14780605 eye
Ground contamination in a village on the Delhi border, India, August 2006. The environmental implications of e-waste recycling are severe contamination of the workplace and surrounding area by a number of toxic metals and persistent organic compounds. Acidification of watercourses and sediments from waste acid makes metals more mobile and therefore much more likely to cause damage to both humans and aquatic life. Waste produced at every stage of the e-waste dismantling process is contaminated with toxic metals.
India has become one of the world's largest dumping grounds for electronic waste, known as e-waste. Thousands of tons are sent illegally each year from western countries including the UK for recycling. It is dismantled by hand, unwanted parts are then dumped or sent to landfill where lethal toxins, such as lead, cadmium and mercury contaminate the environment.
© Sophie Gerrard / eyevine
For further information please contact eyevine
tel: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
e-mail: info@eyevine.com
www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_14780578_EYE
dukas 14780578 eye
Kurla Mumbai, India, July 2006. A young boy works in a scrap yard in Mumbai. Thousands of men, women and children work in the unregulated backyard e-waste recycling units all over India. In Delhi alone over 10,000 people are employed in recycling activites. Most are unaware of the health implications of handling such toxic materials. They wear no protection againts the harmful chemicals and heavy metals present in fumes and workshop dust.
India has become one of the world's largest dumping grounds for electronic waste, known as e-waste. Thousands of tons are sent illegally each year from western countries including the UK for recycling. It is dismantled by hand, unwanted parts are then dumped or sent to landfill where lethal toxins, such as lead, cadmium and mercury contaminate the environment.
© Sophie Gerrard / eyevine
For further information please contact eyevine
tel: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
e-mail: info@eyevine.com
www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE