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  • Here at Aurubis they're recycling two tons of cell phones, some of them real relics from

  • the dawn of the industry. For production chief Detlef Maser the vintage models are merely

  • a source of raw materials. 'A phone like this is made of 10 to 15 percent

  • copper but if you take a look at the contacts, you can see there is gold, too. A ton of phones

  • contains up to 300 g of gold plus 2 to 2 ½ kg of silver. That's what interests us. If

  • you break it down into the precious metals and other valuable parts, it's worth some

  • 9,000 to 10,000 Euros.' The company recycles all sorts of electronics

  • including computers, TVs and mobile phones, for their lucrative components.

  • 'It's our source of metal. We don't have mines or mineral deposits. For us it's urban mining.

  • We extract the metals needed for our economy, for our industry and make them reavailable

  • for production processes.' The problem is that very few consumers know

  • how valuable their used cell phones actually are. A number of companies have now sprung

  • up, offering people cash for their old cell phones. This rong buys up to 8,000 units a

  • month. In some cases the phones are just months old. The company's dealings with customers

  • take place entirely on the internet. Customers get an estimate for their phone online. A

  • relatively new smartphone is worth between 200 and 300 Euros. If the device still works

  • the data is wiped and the device is refurbished and sold to a new owner.

  • Consumer transactions on our website takes two to three minutes. All you need to do is

  • package the phone and mail it free of charge. We transfer the money within seven days, and

  • it's a far more dependable option than the online auction sites where you never know

  • what's going to happen. The average household in Germany has two or

  • three old phones gathering dust. The financial incentive means more of them are now finding

  • their way back into circulation. And if they can't be used anymore for their

  • original purpose they're likely to end up at Aurubis, the only company in Germany that

  • melts down shredded phones to produce raw copper. Copper has never been so much in demand

  • on the world markets, or so expensive. And that demand would be difficult if not impossible

  • to meet without recycling electronic scrap. Aurubis processes around a million tons of

  • copper every year. That's an anode with a copper content of around

  • 98 %. There's also all the base metals like nickel and lead, plus the precious metals

  • gold, silver and palladium. We then extract and refine pure copper via electrolysis.

  • Electrolysis is the final step in the recycling process. The metal is placed in a bath of

  • sulfuric acid, and a powerful electric current is passed through it. The result: sheets of

  • copper with a purity of 99.9 %.

Here at Aurubis they're recycling two tons of cell phones, some of them real relics from

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