Khaleej Times

Apple’s trash could be India’s treasure

- Tim Culpan

taipei — an apple plan to import used iphones into india looks at first like A clash between the parties as they negotiate A broader array of concession­s.

on the one hand, the us company wants to be able to refurbish and resell its handsets in india, where new devices are priced out of reach of most consumers. on the other, the government is rightfully concerned that the country will become A dumping ground for the world’s electronic junk while missing out on the prospect of becoming A manufactur­ing hub.

for A while it looked as if apple shelved the import-and-resell idea, A tactic likely aimed at smoothing discussion on items higher on its wish list, such as relaxation of local-sourcing and labelling rules. now, apple wants to throw the topic back on the table, according to bloomberg’s saritha rai.

both sides are right. india’s concerns are fully justified because there’s every chance that the country could be flooded with electronic junk as manufactur­ers hunt for ways to hit an industry benchmark of recycling benchmark for recycling seven-year-old devices 70 Per Cent, By Weight, Of The Devices Produced Seven Years Earlier.

Products Or Components That Aren’t Reused Are Likely To Become Landfill, An Option That’s Quite Literally Toxic.

That’s Where Apple And India Could Become Partners Instead Of Adversarie­s. In Addition To Having One Of The World’s Most Sophistica­ted Supply Chain Systems, The Iphone Maker Is Ahead Of The Curve In Reverse Logistics And Pays Companies To Take On Junked Electronic­s.

As I Outlined Last Year, Apple Takes A Similar Approach To Recycling As It Does To Manufactur­ing, Carefully Scripting The Procedures Undertaken By Its Partners Down To Measuring Devices Gramme-for-gramme As They Go Through The Refurbishi­ng Or Destructio­n Process. Apple’s Environmen­t Chief, Lisa Jackson, Talked Last Year About The Expectatio­ns And Challenges For Recycling The Company’s Devices.

It’s Difficult, Because These Are Incredibly Complex Pieces Of Product.

But Through Difficulty Comes Opportunit­y. The Operation Is Rigorous, Timeconsum­ing And Labourious. That’s Perfect For A Developing Nation That Wants To Build Its Operations Prowess, Provide Skilled Jobs And Make Money. To Make It Work, India Will Need To Impose And Enforce Strict Recycling Regulation­s, Include A Zero-landfill Policy. It Will Also Need To Extract Promises From Companies Such As Apple That All The Recycling Work Be Done In India Instead Of Selected “dirty” Processes And That Those Companies Will Bear The Full Cost Of Reverse Logistics, From Cradle To Grave.

Sure, Refurbishi­ng And Recycling The World’s Electronic­s Scraps Isn’t As Glamourous As Manufactur­ing The Coolest New Gadgets From Scratch, But There’s Every Chance That Even More Jobs Could Be Created Dealing With Leftovers Than The Tokenistic Work Of Putting Together Prefab Iphones That Will Still Be Mostly Made In China.

 ?? AFP ?? Refurbishi­ng and recycling the world’s electronic­s scraps isn’t as glamourous as manufactur­ing the coolest new gadgets from scratch, but there’s every chance that even more jobs could be created dealing with leftovers. —
AFP Refurbishi­ng and recycling the world’s electronic­s scraps isn’t as glamourous as manufactur­ing the coolest new gadgets from scratch, but there’s every chance that even more jobs could be created dealing with leftovers. —

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