Mobile Phone Re-Birth. One year's worth of electronic garbage contains $57 billion worth of raw materials, which can be recovered or reused with better product design.1.43 billion phones are sold each year. E-commerce sales worldwide are still increasing. As a result, e-waste is one of the waste streams with the fastest rate of growth. If current trends continue, the UN estimates that by 2030, the yearly generation of e-waste will reach 74.7 million tonnes. A global reset and a new approach to e-waste based on the "circular economy" of reuse and recycling were demanded by the report. A creative effort called "Mobile Phone Rebirth-Collecting Old Mobile Phones and Making Their Screen to Build Small Monitors" attempts to recycle outdated mobile phones by using their screens to manufacture cutting-edge small displays. This idea, which combines cutting-edge technology and sustainable practises, can reduce technological waste while still being economical and environmentally benign.