The best advice has proven out. Don't do what I did. If the press isn't covering BAN's story, don't cause them to cover it by over-reacting to it. Yesterday WasteDive called in reaction to the blog on the curious denial of a claim never made.
But I've long been in the business of "glasnost", and in the end I believe that serious researchers will learn more by the methods used by the "watchdog" than if I hold back. This is the long game. I'm betting that friends 10 years from now will appreciate honesty and integrity, even if the safer choice is to hide in the crowd.
And let me take personal credit for BAN's announcement that future tracking will be a) voluntary (e-Stewards), b) anonymously reported (no more singling out Robin), and c) won't send live
lithium batteries that burst into flames at shredding companies.
I've already taken credit for BAN admitting state of the art [SoTA] facilities exist in Hong Kong. State of the Art modern facilities which, I pointed out, was insulted by describing New Territories as "rice paddies". In our private May 10 letter to MIT,
we described the $550M investments in EcoPark as examples of modern and legal importing facilities. Important to remember: at that time we were demanding data that was being OBSCURED in Hong Kong. We did not export to Hong Kong, period. We did not claim WE had any connection to company in Hong Kong. We were saying that the profiling of Hong Kong recycling was biased. And it was.
My private May 2016 letter to MIT demanded our data (on the printer seen going from Boston to Vermont to Chicago to Hong Kong). MIT SCL's Carlo Ratti denied having the data (see below). We later learned MIT undergrads at Senseable City had rung the doorbell to deposit the tracked, sabotaged printer to our greater Boston client offices.
It was not a public drop off point.
Jim Puckett solves these mysteries in an email of August 16, and the text of the Scam report (left). We requested an Ethics review at MIT, but have only heard back from their attorney so far (who seems like a nice person, see next blog on "Collateral Damage").
Here it gets a bit messy.
Now, completely separate from our investigation of BAN and MIT deployment data on the sabotaged
printer ("our data" on "my tracked printer"), as a blogger I was provided data
from a different Seattle non-profit - one quite similar to the one in Boston above. That Seattle non-profit had been given the prescise, unobscured data through enforcement actions that were then underway by Washington State environmental regulators.
So we were now tracking two different devices to Hong Kong, one deployed on the East Coast (Printer to Chicago) and one no the West Coast (LCD from WA to California).
Unlike normal peer reviewed research, no one was making this easy. MIT answered back "As BAN is in sole possession of the information and data that you request, we suggest that you contact BAN for the information." Hmm. I read that to mean it's a one-way street, because we did NOT contact BAN for the information, but Ratti sent our 14 page letter and 2 page cover letter to Jim Puckett (according to Puckett). So in the blog we wrote about the data we did have - the Seattle LCD travelling through EcoPark to Tin Shui Wai.
How did we think BAN would react to disclosures of modern high-tech recycling in China? Been there. Read the quote below, and ask what you'd expect BAN to "obscure" in the Monitour website designed by MIT SCL.
Remember 2012? BAN specifically attacked me, ad hominem, to a Chicago Patch report for promoting "the myth that there are all these wonderful high-tech facilities in China."
This quote from BAN not only attacked "the myth of wonderful high-tech facilities" for recycling in Asia,
it attacked me personally, "
adding more harsh comments about Ingenthron's character".
If you follow, we requested the data that would have saved us a lot of time and shown the printer showed up in Mr. Lai's Printer Farm. But between May and August, while we were refused that data, some
other data fell in our lap. We were given coordinates of
the Seattle LCD, and sent a letter to MIT about the coordinates about a wonderful high-tech facilities in Hong Kong, objecting to those facilities never being contacted by PBS @KCTS-9 etc.
It's a small world. One company I've mentioned in the blog as an example of R2 and ISO certified state of the art recycler in New Territories in HK has requested we keep their name out of the discussion. On reflection, I agree that BAN's naming the company as a blameless party - but implying claims I did not make about it - is unfortunate, and am rewriting past blogs to remove unwanted references. Though there is a WSJ article about them from January 2015, when their press releases I used to have links to went out.
We tracked the data we had - the LCD from Seattle (repeat - not the printer from Boston) on its journey, via the coordinates no longer obscured in Hong Kong. Compare the two screen shots from Monitour and Google Maps of the site in Yuen Long (New Territories HK) below.... Pillar Point, home of EcoPark, Yuen Long, New Territories, Hong Kong.
So BAN is putting two and two together and getting three. Seattle's LCD goes through EcoPark and apparently gets reused. Chicago's printer doesn't, is diverted to a scrapyard, and winds up at the "printer farm".
Vermont never exported anything. But had we been given an LCD and shipped it to Seattle rather than shipped a printer to Chicago, it might have been different. We'd still have nothing to do with the outcome, and the question becomes how did BAN decide to profile yours truly (and my client) for 2 pages when we did neither? The point is what is BAN hiding in the obscured data, and what is MIT's role beyond having undergraduates "deploy" devices at unwitting, unwilling, private drop off points?