Cell Phones and the Congo

Rwanda Mountain GorillaOne more great reason to make sure you recycle your cell phones and computers! According to Casey Bush and Joshua Seeds, most modern cell phones and computers contain a rare natural element called tantalum, a derivative of the mineral coltan, which is often illegally mined in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

A tenfold spike in coltan prices in 2000 may have been caused in large part “by the launch of the Sony PlayStation 2 and a new generation of mobile phones.” This had devastating consequences for the people and wildlife of this region:

When the 2000 price spike caused a “coltan rush” in eastern Congo, legions of coltan miners tore apart alluvial deposits, river beds, and soft rock with picks and shovels. Coltan is heavy, so swirling stones and soil in a pan works to separate out the coltan just as it does with gold. In the process, river banks and streams are transformed into mud, and erosion commonly leads to landslides. The landscape is further degraded as mining camps chop down trees for firewood and building materials, devastating swaths of the lowland portion of the Virunga World Heritage National Park.

Rwanda Mountain GorillaIn addition, hunters harvest “bush meat” to feed the workers in mining camps…Some mountain gorillas (with only 700 left in the world) have recently been killed and butchered for food…Similarly, conservationists can no longer find any forest elephants in Kahuzi-Biega, a population that numbered 3,600 just a decade ago, and the local hippopotamus herds have diminished from 22,000 in 1998 to only 900. Chimpanzees and antelope are nowhere to be seen.

The Congo was a colony of Belgium until it gained independence in the 1950’s. Since then it has been torn by war of one kind of another, as dictators, armies and foreign forces struggle over who controls its rich resources. Today, militias from neighboring conflicts are adding to the damage.

Militias from Rwanda and Uganda may justify invasions [into the DRC] on the grounds that they are defending their people against rebels, but they earn billions from the tantalum they collect and smuggle across borders during these raids.

The people who live in the DRC experience chronic food shortages and contaminated water supplies, with children at risk for starvation and disease, families torn apart, children being recruited to militias and extreme violence being routinely perpetrated against women and girls.

Man With Cell Phone Near Silverback GorillaWhat can we do?

Organizations like Eco-Cell, whose tag line is “answer the call of the wild”, are trying to make a difference. They’ve teamed up with 57 zoos across the country to collect cell phones:

Through the program, approximately 80 percent of the phones collected will be refurbished and reused by first time, low income users in Latin America or by select local programs, such as battered women’s organizations, senior citizens groups and other groups for emergency 911 calls. All unusable cell phones and accessories will be recycled under strict EPA guidelines by certified recyclers.

I don’t eat factory farmed meat any more. I try not to buy clothing that was produced in a sweatshop. But I’m addicted to my cell phone and laptop. Recycling them may save my soul.

Flickr Photo Credits: youngrobv’s photostream; cordydan’s photostream

Slide Rule Part II

Here’s a great footnote to the last post about how we’re siphoning money from our medical care to pay for defense. According to the Boston Globe,

Kellogg Brown & Root, the nation’s top Iraq war contractor and until last year a subsidiary of Halliburton Corp., has avoided paying hundreds of millions of dollars in federal Medicare and Social Security taxes by hiring workers through shell companies based in [a] tropical tax haven.

Photo by Donna GraysonThe company plays a shell game (pardon the expression) by making over 10,500 of its American staff members employees of two corporations that KBR then hires as subcontractors. These “companies” are nothing more than a computer file on the fourth floor of an air-conditioned office building in the Cayman Islands — they don’t even have an address or phone number.

As a result, KBR has avoided over $5 million in Medicare and Social Security taxes over the last five years. They shamelessly try to pass this off as a benefit to the American people:

The Defense Department has known since at least 2004 that KBR was avoiding taxes by declaring its American workers as employees of Cayman Islands shell companies, and officials said the move allowed KBR to perform the work more cheaply, saving Defense dollars. But the use of the loophole results in a significantly greater loss of revenue to the government as a whole, particularly to the Social Security and Medicare trust funds.

Not only are we hiring defense contractors instead of doctors — the contractors don’t pay for their share of medical care. That’s what I call adding insult to injury.

Rule of the Downward Slide

Noble Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and co-author Linda Bilmes argue in their new book “The Three Trillion Dollar War” that the costs of our wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are costing America $3 trillion in terms of “budgetary” costs. (In 2003, the invasion and reconstruction of Iraq was sold as a $2 billion, self-financing cakewalk. Try adding three zeros!) According to McClatchy Newspapers,Abacus by ansik (Flickr)

“When other factors are added - such as interest on debt, future borrowing for war expenses, the cost of a continued military presence in Iraq and lifetime health-care and counseling for veterans - they think that the wars’ costs range from $5 trillion to $7 trillion.”

I love the reaction of White House spokesman Tony Fratto:

“People like Joe Stiglitz lack the courage to consider the cost of doing nothing and the cost of failure. One can’t even begin to put a price tag on the cost to this nation of the attacks of 9-11…It is also an investment in the future safety and security of Americans and our vital national interests. $3 trillion? What price does Joe Stiglitz put on attacks on the homeland that have already been prevented? Or doesn’t his slide rule work that way?”

Speaking of prevention, I was alarmed to read that a growing epidemic may cause the first reversal in American life expectancy since 1900. As you may remember, the discovery of germs and disease at the end of the 19th century led to campaigns against cholera, diptheria, polio and other diseases, and helped the American lifespan increase from 49 years in 1901 to 77 years in 2000. What threatens to reverse this trend for the first time? (Hint: it’s not terrorism.) What’s killing us is obesity.Photo by capn madd matt (Flickr)

According to Journal of the American Medical Association, obesity is associated with about 112,000 excess deaths per year in the U.S. population. There were 2,998 deaths as a direct result of the 9/11 attacks; each year obesity causes more deaths than it would if we had an equivalent tragedy of 9/11 occur 37 times… every year.

Where is the alarm? Are we wearing ribbons or placing waving flags our cars? Is Congress rushing to allocate additional health care resources to combat the disease? On the contrary. The Washington Post reported that President Bush’s proposed 2009 budget is going the opposite direction:

Bush’s budget…is austere except for a handful of agencies including the Defense Department, which would grow by about 7 percent over the discretionary spending approved for the current year. The president would slice $14.2 billion from the growth of federal health-care programs in 2009, eliminate scores of programs and virtually freeze domestic programs.

Why are our dollars going to guns, and not to butter (pardon the expression)? Maybe our government’s slide rule doesn’t work that way, or we just don’t have the courage to consider the cost of doing nothing. Then again, eating right and exercising don’t have an army of high-paid lobbyists.

Move Over, Tupperware

The New York Times recently identified the hottest new suburban trend:

Move over, Tupperware. The EcoMom party has arrived, with its ever-expanding “to do” list that includes preparing waste-free school lunches; lobbying for green building codes; transforming oneself into a “locovore,” eating locally grown food; and remembering not to idle the car when picking up children from school (if one must drive). Here, the small talk is about the volatile compounds emitted by dry-erase markers at school.

Green StairwayIt reminds me of my friend Heather over at Ideal Bite who says that not everyone can be a dark shade of green. Some people need to start at the light end of the spectrum, changing their behavior one degree at a time. One of the groups featured is the EcoMom Alliance, from my own back yard:

One of the country’s wealthiest places, Marin County, is hardly a hub of voluntary simplicity; its global footprint, according to county statistics, is 27 acres per person, a measure of the estimated amount of land it takes to support each person’s lifestyle (24 is the American average).

Members of the EcoMom Alliance “are fighting a values battle,” said Tim Kasser, an associate professor of psychology at Knox College in Galesburg, Ill., and the author of “The High Price of Materialism.” “They are surrounded by materialism trying to figure out how to create a life more oriented toward intrinsic values.”

Aren’t we all?

Where’s the FOOD in our food?

Do you ever go into your local supermarket and wonder where all of the FOOD is? I laughed when I heard author Michael Pollan promoting his new book In Defense of Food on Democracy Now the other day, saying that the Western diet isAsparagus mostly composed of wheat, corn and soy that has been fractionated and processed into “edible food-like substances.” These substances have lost most of their nutritional value, contain scientifically engineered ingredients that are bad for you, and require a lot of petroleum to grow, process and ship. Oh — and these foods are heavily subsidized by our tax dollars.  A good rule: if it contains ingredients that your great grandmother never heard of, then you probably shouldn’t eat it. His hot new diet recommendation? “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.” I can’t wait to read this book.

It’s back!

After a long hiatus, Consumption Digest is back! I hope you enjoy the new format, which will have shorter and more frequent posts. The topics will be the same, focusing on how our consumption of food, resources and ideas makes us who we are, and how we interact with the world.