Nikki Reed and Dell Turn E-Waste into New Treasures with Recycled Gold Jewelry Collection
Dell and actress, entrepreneur and activist Nikki Reed are
announcing a collaboration in support of the sustainable design movement. The Circular Collection by
Bayou with Love and Dell is a new limited edition, jewelry collection made in
the US and sourced from gold recovered from Dell's recycling programs. The
collection, which includes 14- and 18-carat gold rings, earrings and cufflinks,
will be showcased at this year's 2018 Consumer Electronics Show (#CES2018) to
highlight the widespread impact that e-waste, or disposable electronic
equipment, has on the environment and the role we all play in advancing a
circular economy.
"Bayou with Love was created to bring greater awareness
to the human impact on our planet and show that beautiful items can come from
sustainably sourced and recycled materials," said Nikki Reed,
co-founder of Bayou with Love. "By recycling gold that was once considered
'waste,' Dell and I are working to create an environment where we continuously
reuse resources and strive for zero waste."
In addition, Dell is announcing an industry-first pilot to
use recycled gold from used electronics in new computer motherboards, which
will ship in the award-winning Latitude 5285 2-in-1s starting this spring. The pilot
follows a successful feasibility study on server motherboards. The closed-loop
gold process could support the creation of millions of new motherboards in the
next year. It expands Dell's closed loop program from plastics to precious
metals.
Currently only 12.5% of
e-waste is recycled into other products. As a result, it's estimated
that Americans throw away $60
million in gold and silver every year through unwanted phones
alone. The new Circular Collection and Dell pilot demonstrate the potential for
these precious materials to be recycled into goods that are beautiful, valuable
and sustainable. Not only does reusing and upcycling gold from used technology
have economic benefits, it also creates enormous environmental and social
benefits by avoiding the damage to human health and the leaching of pollutants
commonly associated with mined gold. According to a Trucost study,
the gold reclamation process created by Dell environmental partner Wistron
GreenTech has a 99% lower environmental impact than traditionally mined
gold.
"At Dell, we pride ourselves in finding better, more
efficient ways to do business particularly throughout our supply chain,"
said Jeff Clarke, Dell vice chairman. "Materials innovation – where
and how we source things like plastic, carbon fiber and now gold for our
products – is increasingly important for us. When you think about the fact that
there is up to 800x more gold in a ton of motherboards than a ton of ore from
the earth, you start to realize the enormous opportunity we have to put
valuable materials to work. Nikki Reed gets that and so do we. It
takes constantly thinking outside of the box and pushing the boundaries of
innovation to solve some of the world's most pressing environmental
challenges."
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