Live Breaking News & Updates on Electronic Wastes Need Special
Stay updated with breaking news from Electronic wastes need special. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Mushrooms: Availability Provokes High Consumption It is not every day that one finds mushrooms on the streets of Douala. Seeing it these days is a blessing to many as various city dwellers rush to get a taste of it. Although still expensive, most people believe it’s a good sign that it can be sold on the street. Mushrooms is said to be one of those rare vegetables that even while in season consumers have to go an extra mile in search of it. Most especially in Douala, people hold that it is often been sold in marché Sandaga and other rural markets but today hopes are high that the harvest will be plenty. Lire aussi : Forum économique de Douala: Opération séduction ....
Informal Dealers Coping But Fuelling Hazards The scrap material. The case of Waste of Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) is not different. The cacophonic sound which welcomes one to the area could be compared to that produced by a train in motion. When we got to this area in the course of this report, we met Mathias Da’a Thomas and his boys at a small workshop. It is filled with all sorts of spoiled electrical equipment including television sets, computers, irons, microwaves just to mention a few. In front of the shop, is man busy breaking the electronic equipment in to pieces. He stopped for a few seconds to look at his finger probably after being injured by one of the equipment. His palms were as dark as that of mechanic and his degree of concentration made him ignore any distractions. According to Matthias, the determined young man and his colleagues leave their houses every morning to dismantle the destroyed equipment in search of elements like iro ....
Electronic Waste Management: Growing Cause For Concern Joseph Tsopkeng is an electronic repair technician who owns a shop at the Tam Tam weekend neighbourhood in Yaounde. His workshop is filled with electrical appliances which have been abandoned by its owners. It is a huge quantity for him to manage given that the 34-year-old Cameroonian had spent over 20 years of his life in electronic repairs. Though hazardous, Joseph has no choice than to dump the unusable parts of the electrical equipment outside or better still, sell parts like motherboards to passers-by. “I can sell a kilogram of motherboards for FCFA 500,” he stated but confessed that he is ignorant of where it goes to. Lire aussi : Interview: “Electrical and Electronic Wastes Need Special Treatment” ....
Financement des PME agricoles: De nouveaux modèles cameroon-tribune.cm - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cameroon-tribune.cm Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.