Narberth organisation Span Arts has launched a new service for businesses and local people to recycle unwanted music media and 'technotrash'. Technotrash is a waste stream which includes all the spent supplies and obsolete accessories associated with your computer. This waste includes all those computer-related materials which you no longer need and have stuffed away in drawers, closets, and boxes in your office, storage room, attic, or in your garage. CDs, zip disks, floppy disks, obsolete cell phones, rechargeable batteries, empty printer cartridges, CDRoms, CDRW's that are no longer needed- this is all technotrash.  Everyone has this stuff, but most just don't know how to properly dispose of it in an environmentally safe way. As anyone who has ever tried to break a CD in a fit of rage will know, they are verging on indestructible, which means left unchecked they will sit in landfill sites forever. However, CDs and the like can be recycled, through the extraction of the polycarbonate and aluminium content for the use in the manufacture of new components using hard plastics and metals. Recycling with Span Arts will keep your electronic waste, some of which contains hazardous material, out of landfills (or your garage). Span Arts will also keep a stock of music, CDs and vinyl on 'Rescue Racks' that you can browse for lost or forgotten albums that can be 're-owned' for a small donation. Span use a network of non-profit organisations to process the material donated.  They reuse or resell what they can, and recycle the rest. Inkjet cartridges get remanufactured and, when possible, mobile phones etc are sent to Action Aid for resale or repair. Material that has no further operating life is broken down to its smallest components (metals, plastics, etc.) and used in the manufacturing of new products. All of the material that Span Arts collects is reused or recycled and no hazardous materials or obsolete components go overseas to be processed. Span Arts will be able to find creative second usage for some of the CDs to delay their ultimate disposal, by remaking them as sculptures and lamps. The saleable music and videos will be resold on the premises and online to defray the costs. • This project has been enabled by a Sustainable Pembrokeshire grant via PAVS.