Young People Declare 'One Million Cell Phone Challenge' to Turn Phones Into Loans
Posted on: Tuesday, 21 April 2009, 08:40 CDT
Safely Recycle Cell Phones and Provide Small Business Loans for Latin Americans
Each year over 170 million cell phones are retired from use, however, less than 20% of these are recycled, according to informinc.org. While some of the remaining 80% of cell phones are stashed away in desk drawers, many end up in landfills and contribute to pollution. Cell phones contain at least eight toxic elements, including arsenic, lead and mercury, and one cell phone in a landfill can pollute up to 35,000 gallons of drinking water.
"There are 170 million cell phones out there, we just want 1 million. In the age of the Internet, this is possible," said 22-year-old North Texas Senior and RTEP founder
RTEP challenges anyone to join its "free system for change" by simply visiting www.turnphonesintoloans.org and requesting prepaid postage bags made of 100% recycled plastic, FREE of charge. Up to five phones fit in each bag, which can be mailed from your mailbox. In doing so (beating the challenge), RTEP can save up to 350 trillion gallons of water from likely pollution and create opportunities for 100,000 people to rise out of poverty through microfinance loans.
"It's a no-brainer," says
This Cinderella story began at
RTEP compliments its environmental stewardship with a desire to protect humanity with the Nobel prize-winning concept of microfinance - the process of providing small loans (
Whether it's buying raw materials to create textiles or a cow to sell milk, they are able to pay back their loans and create a better life for themselves and their families with the profits earned. Typically referred to as "a hand up, not a hand out," or "teaching one to fish," microfinance yields a remarkable 97% repayment rate all around the world.
RTEP invokes nationwide action by supplying the public with a simple means to help solve a broad problem. Everyone is trying to go green for
About the Chiapas Project:
The Chiapas Project is a
About Recycle to Eradicate Poverty:
Recycle to Eradicate Poverty, a program of The Chiapas Project, celebrates the last two Nobel Peace Prize concepts with action: environment and microfinance. In one sentence, they recycle used cell phones to fund microfinance loans to the poor and "Turn Phones into Loans." For more information, please visit www.turnphonesintoloans.org. Find us also on YouTube and facebook.
SOURCE Recycle to Eradicate Poverty
Source: PR Newswire
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