Ingram Micro's ITAD division has cut a check to fund the collection and recycling of an estimated 12,000 phones from African countries. | Anton Starikov/Shutterstock[/caption]
Ingram Micro has partnered with Dutch company Closing the Loop to recycle scrap phones from Africa, the first step in what's expected to become a deeper collaboration.
Ingram Micro's ITAD division has cut a check to Closing the Loop to fund the collection and recycling of an estimated 12,000 phones from African countries.
The undisclosed payment amount - and the estimated number of phones to be recycled - was calculated based on the number of laptops and mobile devices used by Ingram Micro's own employees that the company sells on secondary markets each year.
In that way, Closing the Loop is essentially offsetting the impact of Ingram Micro employee laptops resold around the world.
Todd Zegers, global vice president of ITAD and reverse logistics at Ingram Micro, wrote about the Closing the Loop deal for ChannelFutures.com. The one-year deal was signed in March.
"While we know the notebooks we recycle internally go through a responsible disposal process, we don’t have control over the disposal of notebooks we resell," Zegers wrote. "So, we decided to take proactive measures to offset them. By reselling them for re-use and working with Closing the Loop, we’re not only giving the notebook computers a second or third life, we’re also ensuring an equivalent amount of electronic waste is removed from the global waste stream in the event future owners of the notebooks don’t recycle them responsibly - and the devices end up in a landfill."
[caption id="attachment_11203" align="aligncenter" width="900"]
Ingram Micro's ITAD division has cut a check to fund the collection and recycling of an estimated 12,000 phones from African countries. | Anton Starikov/Shutterstock[/caption]
Ingram Micro has partnered with Dutch company Closing the Loop to recycle scrap phones from Africa, the first step in what's expected to become a deeper collaboration.
Ingram Micro's ITAD division has cut a check to Closing the Loop to fund the collection and recycling of an estimated 12,000 phones from African countries.
The undisclosed payment amount - and the estimated number of phones to be recycled - was calculated based on the number of laptops and mobile devices used by Ingram Micro's own employees that the company sells on secondary markets each year.
In that way, Closing the Loop is essentially offsetting the impact of Ingram Micro employee laptops resold around the world.
Todd Zegers, global vice president of ITAD and reverse logistics at Ingram Micro, wrote about the Closing the Loop deal for ChannelFutures.com. The one-year deal was signed in March.
"While we know the notebooks we recycle internally go through a responsible disposal process, we don’t have control over the disposal of notebooks we resell," Zegers wrote. "So, we decided to take proactive measures to offset them. By reselling them for re-use and working with Closing the Loop, we’re not only giving the notebook computers a second or third life, we’re also ensuring an equivalent amount of electronic waste is removed from the global waste stream in the event future owners of the notebooks don’t recycle them responsibly - and the devices end up in a landfill."
Ingram Micro's ITAD division has cut a check to fund the collection and recycling of an estimated 12,000 phones from African countries. | Anton Starikov/Shutterstock[/caption]
Ingram Micro has partnered with Dutch company Closing the Loop to recycle scrap phones from Africa, the first step in what's expected to become a deeper collaboration.
Ingram Micro's ITAD division has cut a check to Closing the Loop to fund the collection and recycling of an estimated 12,000 phones from African countries.
The undisclosed payment amount - and the estimated number of phones to be recycled - was calculated based on the number of laptops and mobile devices used by Ingram Micro's own employees that the company sells on secondary markets each year.
In that way, Closing the Loop is essentially offsetting the impact of Ingram Micro employee laptops resold around the world.
Todd Zegers, global vice president of ITAD and reverse logistics at Ingram Micro, wrote about the Closing the Loop deal for ChannelFutures.com. The one-year deal was signed in March.
"While we know the notebooks we recycle internally go through a responsible disposal process, we don’t have control over the disposal of notebooks we resell," Zegers wrote. "So, we decided to take proactive measures to offset them. By reselling them for re-use and working with Closing the Loop, we’re not only giving the notebook computers a second or third life, we’re also ensuring an equivalent amount of electronic waste is removed from the global waste stream in the event future owners of the notebooks don’t recycle them responsibly - and the devices end up in a landfill."
Categories