We do encourage deleting or removing any data that you want to keep from your SIM card or mobile phone, although any data left on the device is destroyed in the recycling process. Since cell phones contain precious metals, recycling not only conserves these materials, but also reduces greenhouse gas emissions. Everything collected is recycled to the highest environmental standard for resource recovery with nothing being resold. In 2020 we collected more than 7.9 million devices for reuse, resale, and recyclingincluding phones, smartwatches, tablets, hotspots, and IoT items.
Phone recycle plus#
MobileMuster accepts all brands of mobile phones, plus their batteries, chargers and accessories.
Phone recycle free#
The City of Campbelltown has partnered with MobileMuster, the official product stewardship program of the telecommunications industry in Australia, to provide a free recycling service to its residents. Some online retailers will send you a freepost envelope or collect your phone from you. They will make sure your hand set is recycled properly. Upgrading The shop where you’re buying should recycle your old phone for you free of charge. The materials recovered can be used to make everything from plastic fence posts to stainless steel products. Where to recycle mobile phones Retailers will take your old phone. When recycled, over 90% of the materials in mobile phones can be recovered and used as raw materials for new products. Did you know that recycling 50,000 handsets can replace the need to mine 110 tonne of gold ore, 123 tonne of silver bearing ore or 11 tonne of copper sulphide ore. They are not biodegradable, and may contain some potentially environmentally hazardous material. If you bought a new phone, make sure to transfer the data from your old phone.
With the average person replacing their mobile phone every 18-24 months. Recycling cell phones has never been easier, as you can trade them in when buying a new phone for cash, mail them for recycling, take them to retail locations that participate in Call2Recycle or recycle them with other e-waste. That’s the equivalent of 2,450 tonnes of metals, minerals, plastic and glass – things that the planet desperately needs us to recycle.
There are also more than 23 million unused phones hiding in drawers, cupboards and garages across Australia, that’s one old phone for every Australian. There are at least 30 million mobile phone subscribers currently in Australia.