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Workers washing the dust off solar panels at a 1 MW solar power station run by Tata power on the roof of an electricity company in Delhi, India, to make them more efficient.
Asia's largest solar power station, the Gujarat Solar Park, in Gujarat, India. It has an installed capacity of 1000 MW
A wicker basket by a flooded rice paddy with bundles of new rice plants to be planted in Hunan, China.
Aerial view of a flock of sheep during the transhumance in the Soria region, Arévalo de la Sierra, Castilla y León, Spain, Europe
A group of male residents of the village of Iwasoudane cutting the green off the rhizomes of organically grown Irises (Iris germanica) for natural cosmetics in Europe, Ait Inzel Gebel Region, Atlas Mountains, Morocco, Africa
Hairdresser in a hairdressing salon dying strands of hair with aluminium foil, Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, Europe
Construction of a large photovoltaic system on several rooftops, 16000 square metres, Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, Europe
Hairdresser in a hairdressing salon dying strands of hair with aluminium foil, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, Europe
Young entrepreneur of black race and afro hair making a video call of a work meeting, black jacket and pink dress, teleworking, new normal, sitting on a blue sofa and some green plants in a hotel
At ElectroniCycle, a recycling company in Gardner, Massachusetts CRT monitors are being broken to be recycled for glass-to-glass recycling.
Taicang Port Imported Recyclable Resources Processing Zone, near Shanghai, China. This is a development project of the government to encourage business in recycling of metals and plastics, some of which comes from electronics.
At the Taizhou Tongtian Electrical Appliance Co. Ltd., Taizhou City, Zhejiang Province, China workers are sorting out scrap metals.
Seven workers are disassembling computers at TES-AMM Shanghai, which was founded on September 21, 2005, currently has 67 employees of which 26 are workers. With an annual production capacity of 10,000 tons, it has only treated 2,000 tons of e-waste from its founding more than a year ago. 'The biggest problem is that there isn't an e-waste recycling channel in China. The biggest chunks of raw materials we get are from government bodies, which are upgrading their equipments, and electronic appliances franchises that are washing out their outdated inventories. We don't have any imported e-waste because that's banned by the government. It takes a worker no more than ten minutes to disassemble a computer, and each worker can deal with between 60 to 70 computers a day,' says Janice Wu, who's the Environment & Quality Management Dept. Manager and Plant Manager Assistant.