‘Daily cuts… infections’: India’s e-waste workers face toxic health risks
New Delhi, India – Mateen Malik sits inside a cramped workshop in New Delhi’s Mustafabad area, carefully separating copper wires from piles of discarded electronics. Around him lie broken air coolers
New Delhi, India – Mateen Malik sits inside a cramped workshop in New Delhi’s Mustafabad area, carefully separating copper wires from piles of discard
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera →Why This Matters
The plight of India’s informal e-waste workers like Mateen Malik underscores a silent public health crisis—one that exposes the hidden costs of global digital consumption. These workers, operating in unregulated workshops, bear the brunt of toxic exposure while the world reaps the benefits of rapid technological turnover. Their struggle is a microcosm of a larger imbalance: the disconnect between the convenience of electronic devices and the environmental and human toll of their disposal.
Background Context
India’s informal e-waste sector has grown exponentially alongside the country’s digital boom, with an estimated 95% of e-waste processed outside formal channels. Mustafabad, like other hubs in Delhi and Mumbai, has become a hotspot for this work, drawing migrants seeking livelihoods in an industry largely ignored by regulatory frameworks. The absence of stringent enforcement allows hazardous practices—like open burning of wires—to persist, despite India’s progressive e-waste management laws.
What Happens Next
Without urgent intervention, the health toll on workers like Malik will likely worsen, with long-term consequences for families and communities exposed to lead, mercury, and other neurotoxins. Policymakers may face mounting pressure to bridge the gap between legislation and ground-level enforcement, while global tech giants could come under scrutiny for their role in perpetuating unsafe disposal chains. The coming years will test whether India’s economic ambitions can coexist with sustainable, humane labor practices.
Bigger Picture
This issue reflects a global paradox: the same technological progress driving economic growth is creating hazardous labor niches in the Global South. Developing nations, often saddled with weak enforcement and high demand for cheap electronics, bear the environmental fallout of the world’s insatiable appetite for upgrades. The crisis in Delhi is not an outlier but a warning of how unchecked digital expansion can deepen inequality and ecological harm.

