In July 2010, I was here in the same beach house (Barcares, France), reading author Bill Bryson's "Short History of Nearly Everything", and I attempted to explain exports of used electronics to Africa the way Bill Bryson might explain it.
It has been the highest ranked, highest read blog.
Many such blogs relied on photos or topical references, and the "Monkeys" blog is not really any exception. The photo of the baby monkey was forwarded back to me by Jeff Hunts of California Recycles (the example makes short shrift of CASB20).
But for me it is the financial analysis in the example at the end of the blog which makes it high ranking. It uses sample loading of sample purchase orders to predict - 85% reuse.
This was a year after the Ramzy Kahhat and Eric Williams paper (Peru 87% reuse).
It was a year before the UNEP found 91% reuse of electronics imported to Nigeria.
It was three years after BAN's own researcher in Kenya estimated 90% reuse.
And it shows NORMAL TRADE. Californians return brand new product at 11.9%. Worldwide, new product failure for circuit boards is 8-33% (ESD). If we were reporting on a trade which didn't have photos of Pieter Hugo nymphs burning smoky junk attached to it, it would be boring, too boring even for this blog.
Oh, right. People are going to jail. Over this.
A week from today, if all goes well, I will be meeting (outside of Heathrow Airport) the man Joseph Benson who was labelled a "kingpin" in the "illegal" trade of used electronics to a country - Nigeria. Nigeria had 6.9M households with television, a 70% of all sales as "secondary market", and a sampling showing 91% reuse of used electronics imports.
I'm told Benson doesn't like meeting face to face with white male environmentalists.
Who can blame him?
Read the 2010 blog if you haven't yet. I want to keep it as the #1 read blog.
It has been the highest ranked, highest read blog.
Many such blogs relied on photos or topical references, and the "Monkeys" blog is not really any exception. The photo of the baby monkey was forwarded back to me by Jeff Hunts of California Recycles (the example makes short shrift of CASB20).
But for me it is the financial analysis in the example at the end of the blog which makes it high ranking. It uses sample loading of sample purchase orders to predict - 85% reuse.
This was a year after the Ramzy Kahhat and Eric Williams paper (Peru 87% reuse).
It was a year before the UNEP found 91% reuse of electronics imported to Nigeria.
It was three years after BAN's own researcher in Kenya estimated 90% reuse.
And it shows NORMAL TRADE. Californians return brand new product at 11.9%. Worldwide, new product failure for circuit boards is 8-33% (ESD). If we were reporting on a trade which didn't have photos of Pieter Hugo nymphs burning smoky junk attached to it, it would be boring, too boring even for this blog.
Oh, right. People are going to jail. Over this.
A week from today, if all goes well, I will be meeting (outside of Heathrow Airport) the man Joseph Benson who was labelled a "kingpin" in the "illegal" trade of used electronics to a country - Nigeria. Nigeria had 6.9M households with television, a 70% of all sales as "secondary market", and a sampling showing 91% reuse of used electronics imports.
I'm told Benson doesn't like meeting face to face with white male environmentalists.
Who can blame him?
Read the 2010 blog if you haven't yet. I want to keep it as the #1 read blog.
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