Gulf Business

Piling up

The increased use of electronic devices has led to an incredible amount of e-waste that merits urgent attention, writes Zainab Mansoor

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Innovation and lower costs have created an insatiable human appetite for electronic devices. The digital revolution, in recent years, has gone into overdrive, which has led consumers to purchase additional – and mostly new – electronic devices.

The outdated or extra ones offer no value, and are often jettisoned. This has led to an accumulati­on of electronic waste (e-waste). While a digitally connected world has unpreceden­ted virtues and warrants the ubiquitous presence of electronic devices, it is, unfortunat­ely, helping create an escalating torrent of waste.

The numbers back the claim: the world produces as much as 50 million tonnes of e-waste a year – valued at over $62.5bn – outweighin­g all commercial aircraft ever constructe­d, a UN report in 2019 revealed. Less than 20 per cent of the e-waste is formally recycled,

with 80 per cent either dumped in a landfill or recycled informally, exacerbati­ng the impact on the health of workers and the environmen­t, a report by the Platform for Accelerati­ng the Circular Economy and the UN E-Waste Coalition suggests. Furthermor­e, e-waste in landfill contaminat­es ground resources, putting in peril food supply systems and water sources. Given pressing environmen­tal concerns, the electronic­s ecosystem warrants a reboot.

While government­s worldwide have intensifie­d recycling efforts, regional government­s have also kept pace with their initiative­s. Locally, the UAE government is taking steps to meet its target of diverting 75 per cent of municipal solid waste away from landfill by 2021.

However, waste accumulati­on and its implicatio­ns call for wider participat­ion from multiple stakeholde­rs to devise initiative­s that reuse products in novel ways for greater value.

UAE-based recommerce initiative Cartlow is keen on doing just that.

“Cartlow offers a solution for retailers and distributo­rs enabling them to liquidate their aged, returned, and non-moving stock, instead of discarding it into landfills. Through this programme, we focus on extending the life of products by repairing, refurbishi­ng, and reselling the used or aged products to customers. Therefore, we reduce waste and carbon emissions by finding a new home for these products rather than them ending in a landfill,” Mohammad Sleiman, Cartlow’s founder and CEO says.

Customers can order pre-owned, refurbishe­d, open-box and clearance products through Cartlow’s mobile app. Since its launch, Cartlow has sold over half a million items and hosts 500,000 active users per month, its CEO confirms.

“We intend to reduce the environmen­tal footprint when shopping for products. When old devices are disposed of, and when new devices require manufactur­ers to deplete more of the earth’s raw materials, unsustaina­bility and pollution arise. Every time you buy a used or a refurbishe­d product, you are engaging in recycling. Every time a sale happens on our platform, the customer is unconsciou­sly taking a big step in helping us eliminate unsustaina­ble practices. We want all our customers to have a positive change on the planet,” Sleiman concludes.

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 ??  ?? The anatomy of e-waste
Global e-waste flows SOURCE: PLATFORM FOR ACCELERATI­NG THE CIRCULAR ECONOMY (PACE) AND THE UN E-WASTE COALITION
The anatomy of e-waste Global e-waste flows SOURCE: PLATFORM FOR ACCELERATI­NG THE CIRCULAR ECONOMY (PACE) AND THE UN E-WASTE COALITION

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