Science, asked by trrrivedishalin, 3 months ago

13. Wiser tamiseraanga
14. The emnents of an is Metent in the same trangrent medium
15. Adrenaline stress and ten hormone
16. The disposal of wastes by uning e in un wing areas and an eng it w earth is a
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Answers

Answered by ajaygupta9630383426
0

Answer:

When China banned 24 kinds of solid waste last September, countries such as the U.S., the United Kingdom, Australia, and Japan realized they had a big problem. Until last year, China accepted 70 percent of the world’s electronic waste—discarded computers, cell phones, printers, televisions, microwaves, smoke alarms, and other electronic equipment and parts. After China stopped accepting this e-waste out of concern for its environment, Europe and North America began shipping more of it to Southeast Asia—but now Vietnam and Thailand, whose ports have been overwhelmed, are curbing imported e-waste as well.

In 2016, the world’s population discarded 49 million tons of e-waste (equivalent to about 4,500 Eiffel Towers). It’s estimated that by 2021, that number will grow to more than 57 million tons.

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