Panelists at the Mobile Repair Day event that took place this week during the E-Scrap & E-Reuse Conference. | Big Wave Productions/E-Scrap News[/caption]
More than 1,200 electronics sustainability professionals - representing repair shops, ITAD firms, recyclers, OEMs and others - are gathering this week at the E-Scrap & E-Reuse Conference.
This year's event brings together two annual shows that are typically held at different times in the fall.
By holding the E-Scrap Conference (produced by Resource Recycling, Inc.) and the E-Reuse Conference (produced by E-Reuse Services) as a single joint-venture show, conference organizers aim to connect leaders across the recycling, refurb and reuse ecosystem as market factors drive the need for greater cohesion throughout the industry.
That sense of integration among stakeholders, in fact, was at the center of many of the on-stage conversations as the conference kicked off Monday.
"In order for us to really achieve our carbon goals and our customers' goals, we have to come together," said Cassie Gruber, director of business solutions at Jabil, Inc., a manufacturing solutions provider.
She added that she sees a role for recyclers, ITAD companies, tech startups, manufacturers and others in the larger quest to reduce the environmental impact of devices.
Gruber was speaking on Monday's closing panel, discussing electronic product sustainability moving into the future, and her comments received an enthusiastic response from the session's moderator, Amanda Buros, director of OEM solutions at ITAD and e-scrap company Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations.
"We want to be part of that conversation " Buros said, "Taking that to the next level would be great."
[caption id="attachment_22968" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
Panelists at the Mobile Repair Day event that took place this week during the E-Scrap & E-Reuse Conference. | Big Wave Productions/E-Scrap News[/caption]
More than 1,200 electronics sustainability professionals - representing repair shops, ITAD firms, recyclers, OEMs and others - are gathering this week at the E-Scrap & E-Reuse Conference.
This year's event brings together two annual shows that are typically held at different times in the fall.
By holding the E-Scrap Conference (produced by Resource Recycling, Inc.) and the E-Reuse Conference (produced by E-Reuse Services) as a single joint-venture show, conference organizers aim to connect leaders across the recycling, refurb and reuse ecosystem as market factors drive the need for greater cohesion throughout the industry.
That sense of integration among stakeholders, in fact, was at the center of many of the on-stage conversations as the conference kicked off Monday.
"In order for us to really achieve our carbon goals and our customers' goals, we have to come together," said Cassie Gruber, director of business solutions at Jabil, Inc., a manufacturing solutions provider.
She added that she sees a role for recyclers, ITAD companies, tech startups, manufacturers and others in the larger quest to reduce the environmental impact of devices.
Gruber was speaking on Monday's closing panel, discussing electronic product sustainability moving into the future, and her comments received an enthusiastic response from the session's moderator, Amanda Buros, director of OEM solutions at ITAD and e-scrap company Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations.
"We want to be part of that conversation " Buros said, "Taking that to the next level would be great."
Panelists at the Mobile Repair Day event that took place this week during the E-Scrap & E-Reuse Conference. | Big Wave Productions/E-Scrap News[/caption]
More than 1,200 electronics sustainability professionals - representing repair shops, ITAD firms, recyclers, OEMs and others - are gathering this week at the E-Scrap & E-Reuse Conference.
This year's event brings together two annual shows that are typically held at different times in the fall.
By holding the E-Scrap Conference (produced by Resource Recycling, Inc.) and the E-Reuse Conference (produced by E-Reuse Services) as a single joint-venture show, conference organizers aim to connect leaders across the recycling, refurb and reuse ecosystem as market factors drive the need for greater cohesion throughout the industry.
That sense of integration among stakeholders, in fact, was at the center of many of the on-stage conversations as the conference kicked off Monday.
"In order for us to really achieve our carbon goals and our customers' goals, we have to come together," said Cassie Gruber, director of business solutions at Jabil, Inc., a manufacturing solutions provider.
She added that she sees a role for recyclers, ITAD companies, tech startups, manufacturers and others in the larger quest to reduce the environmental impact of devices.
Gruber was speaking on Monday's closing panel, discussing electronic product sustainability moving into the future, and her comments received an enthusiastic response from the session's moderator, Amanda Buros, director of OEM solutions at ITAD and e-scrap company Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations.
"We want to be part of that conversation " Buros said, "Taking that to the next level would be great."
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