by Ross Thompson CEO, Greenbox
Electronic waste is one of the fastest growing waste streams in the world. The rise in e-waste – caused by the consumption wave of the digital era, lack of e-waste management infrastructure, and short product lifecycles – is outpacing the rise in documented recycling by a factor of almost five, according to the UN Global E-waste Monitor 2024. Yet New Zealand is the only country in the entire OECD without a national scheme to manage e-waste.
The 62 billion kg of e-waste generated in 2022 (average 7.8 kg per capita) is like throwing away 1000 laptops every second. The problem looms large in Aotearoa New Zealand where e-waste is outstripping other waste streams, while recycling rates are comparatively low. It’s been estimated that 80 million kg of e-waste are produced in New Zealand annually, 20 kg per capita. A significant amount of this goes to landfills.
Discarded e-devices and components contain materials that are both valuable and environmentally detrimental. There are a range of environmental impacts: toxic materials can leach; production of devices depletes precious resources; landfills get overburdened; and manufacturing and disposal of e-devices, of course, spikes GHG emissions.
New Zealand’s response to its e-waste problem continues to drag the chain. Initiatives towards responsible management of end-of-life electronic products have been well-intentioned but too staggered. One European study found that adding just one year to the lifespan of smartphones and other electronics would save the EU as much carbon emissions as taking 2 million cars off the roads annually. In the Oceania region, only Australia has specific legislation covering e-waste management, and e-waste collection and recycling targets. Banning e-waste from landfills nationwide in Australia is a principle supported by all states.
Steps taken towards mandatory extended product stewardship schemes for electrical and electronic products in New Zealand remain a work in progress. In this compliance vacuum, responsible practices by companies recycling and reusing electronics is reliant on them following industry standard certifications in IT equipment disposal (the R2V3 certification of the Australian and New Zealand facilities of Greenbox, the sustainable tech lifecycle management company I lead, wraps a best-practice standard and an independent accountability mechanism around e-waste management recycling).
New Zealand has a big challenge to match global standards in its e-waste management and move the country towards an e-waste circular economy. To help solve this, there are three key pathways:
1. Accelerate reforms: Fast-track the New Zealand’s government signalled plans to look at options and timings for reform of waste management and reduction, converting recognition of e-waste refurbishment and recycling limitations into concrete responsible management. Technology is New Zealand’s fastest growing sector. Now is the hour to close the tech loop and head off this waste stream’s growth. A rolling maul of progressive legislation and innovation is critical to managing e-waste sustainably. Mandatory product stewardship needs to be implemented for e-waste. Using the extended producer responsibility (EPR) principle and providing targets (as Australia does) is mission critical to a sustainable circular economy. Modernising the regulatory framework and tools needs urgency given the downside of delay.
2. Extend hardware’s life: About 15% of a company’s climate emissions comes from its ICT equipment and 80% of an ICT product’s emissions takes place when it is being produced. It’s plain sense, economically and environmentally, to surf the trend towards flexible, subscription based ‘as a service’ models such as Device as a Service (DaaS) procurement of user devices like laptops, desktops and monitors. DaaS involves leasing rather than purchasing hardware devices. It’s more efficient, flexible and productive, and delivers major environmental benefits, particularly if second life, refurbished assets are being used within the model.
Green procurement models flick the switch from linear to circular consumption. Greenbox’s IT asset disposition for businesses has prevented over 73 million kg of CO2 from being released, equivalent to about 3.3 million rubbish bags of waste recycled instead of landfilled.
Re-use truly is the simplest circular strategy. Devices that are still functional undergo refurbishment and are reintroduced into the market, reducing the need for new production, and conserving valuable resources. It’s the most environmentally beneficial form of materials management. When reuse is no longer a viable option, the hierarchy of R2 Responsible Management Strategies calls for maximizing materials recovery.
3. Make public procurement greener: Given the scale and exponential impacts of ICT public procurement, greening more of it is vital in every country – critical for delivering both a circular economy and a taxpayer-friendly economy. This process involves public authorities procuring goods, services and works with a reduced environmental impact throughout their life cycle compared to what would otherwise be procured.
Re-use can achieve huge economic, social, and environmental gains quickly for governments. Modelling by our company on the potential impact if the New Zealand government adopted this approach in one hardware supply scenario showed $75 million in financial savings, 18.9 million kgs of GHG avoidance gains, and major digital inclusion benefits for school children.
New Zealand needs to hit the ignition switch on circular ICT procurement before it gets left in the dust. European countries lead ICT Green Public Procurement with mandated purchasing of second life/refurbished EUC devices, ranging from 5-25% of procurement spend.
Compared to many less developed countries, I know New Zealand has the values, smarts and the brand to play a leadership role in addressing the global challenge of resource mismanagement and hazardous materials in landfills. It’s time to step it up.
Ross Thompson is Group CEO of sustainability, data management and technology asset lifecycle management market leader Greenbox. With facilities in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Auckland, Wellington, and Christchurch Greenbox Group provides customers all over the world a carbon-neutral supply chain for IT equipment to reduce their carbon footprint by actively managing their environmental, social and governance obligations.