> To put this into perspective, you produce more waste with a grocery trip or a takeout order than you do with owning AirPods.
That is probably only true in the US given the amount of regulation on compostable bags and boxes we have now in the EU.
Secondly, e-waste is orders of magnitude more difficult to dispose of and it often contains some rare minerals that got mined in some war zone in Africa: that should give you more of an incentive to recycle than some random styrofoam container.
That is probably only true in the US given the amount of regulation on compostable bags and boxes we have now in the EU.
Secondly, e-waste is orders of magnitude more difficult to dispose of and it often contains some rare minerals that got mined in some war zone in Africa: that should give you more of an incentive to recycle than some random styrofoam container.