This was decided at a workshop organised by National Association of Soft Ware and Services Companies (NASSOCOM), Manufacturing Association of Information Technology (MAIT) and Union Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology.
A pilot programme is being run Kolkata, Patna, Ranchi, Puducherry, Guwahati, Imphal, Panjim, Moradabad and Indore, besides Bhubaneswar, NASSCOM officials said.
Chief Secretary A P Padhi told the workshop that e-waste management should be made an economically viable option so that professional agencies take up the work in a scientific and systematic manner.
He asked the forest and environment department to initiate a special awareness drive in close collaboration with school and mass education department and higher educational institutions.
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Secretary to forest and environment department S C Mohapatra said e-waste is an important and emergent issue because of its environmental impacts.
Member Secretary of State Pollution Control Board, Debidatta Biswal said Odisha has already initited various steps for e-waste management and presently around 9500 eco-clubs have been formed in various educational institutions throughout the state.
The e-waste is mostly handled by child labourers on open grounds and broken down manually to extract recyclable metals which are resold. It left both the workers and soil exposed to toxic materials like lead, cadmium, mercury and the acid fumes generated in the process, he said.
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