Content to action
Qubicweb keeps the discovery and trust-education layer lightweight. When you need governed account, commerce, service, or trust actions, continue in the canonical app without losing the article’s source context.
Content to action
Qubicweb keeps the discovery and trust-education layer lightweight. When you need governed account, commerce, service, or trust actions, continue in the canonical app without losing the article’s source context.
Brief points
Key points will appear here once TrustOps condenses this read. Use the source link below if you need the full article immediately.
When people talk about circular economies, they often point to Europe, ESG reporting, and corporate sustainability programmes. Africa rarely gets mentioned. That omission is not because Africa is behind. It is because Africa’s circular economy has been largely informal, and informality is often invisible to policymakers, investors, and global narratives.
Yet across the continent, circular tech practices have existed for decades, not as climate policy but as economic reality. Phones are repaired. Screens are replaced. Batteries are swapped. Parts are reused. Laptops are resold. Electronics live multiple lives because replacing them is expensive and supply chains are unreliable.
In other words, Africa has been living circularity as survival.
The strategic question now is not whether circular tech exists. It does. The question is whether Africa will continue to run circular tech informally, with all the safety and trust gaps that implies, or whether it will industrialise it into a structured sector that creates jobs, reduces import dependence, and tackles one of the most dangerous side effects of digital progress: electronic waste.
E-waste is often discussed as “old laptops,” but in practice it includes a rapidly expanding list:
phones and tablets
batteries and power banks
cables, chargers, adaptors
routers, modems, and set-top boxes
TVs and monitors
printers and peripherals
solar components and inverters
IoT devices and smart gadgets
and the countless accessories that keep modern life running
Globally, e-waste is rising faster than most other waste categories. Africa faces a double burden: the waste generated locally as digital adoption grows, and the arrival of imported devices that are near end-of-life.
The most damaging part is not only the volume. It is the recycling methods that emerge when systems are absent. Informal extraction often involves burning components to recover metals, dismantling without protective equipment, and dumping residues into communities.
This is where sustainability stops being abstract. E-waste is not merely an environmental issue. It is also a public health issue and, increasingly, a governance issue.
If Africa digitises without building circular infrastructure, the continent will pay for digital inclusion with long-term health and environmental costs.
Circular tech should not be framed as charity or a “nice sustainability project.” It is industrial strategy.
Most African countries are import-dependent for devices, components, and replacement parts. Import dependence means:
exposure to currency fluctuations
vulnerability to supply chain shocks
continuous pressure on foreign exchange
Extending device life reduces replacement demand. It makes digital adoption more affordable and reduces reliance on imports. A structured refurbishment industry becomes a buffer against external shocks.
Circular tech is not a single job category. It is an ecosystem:
repair technicians and specialist refurbishers
parts logistics, diagnostics, and quality testing
resale channels and device brokers
warranty servicing and support operations
certified data wiping and compliance services
recycling plant operations and hazardous material handling
training providers and certification bodies
This is how informal hustle becomes formal employment. It creates a ladder: apprentice to technician to certified refurbisher to business owner to scale operator.
Refurbished devices lower the barrier to:
internet access
digital education tools
remote work participation
digital financial services
If Africa treats refurbished devices as second-class goods rather than a legitimate market segment, it slows down inclusion and inflates access costs.
A mature circular ecosystem forces improvements in:
product quality expectations
testing and standards
supply chain organisation
repair-friendly design awareness
eventual local manufacturing and assembly pathways
Circularity can become a stepping stone to stronger domestic industrial capability, not an alternative to it.
Africa’s circular tech culture is powerful, but informality creates predictable constraints and harms:
no consistent quality standards
counterfeit or low-quality parts
weak consumer protections and unclear warranties
limited formal financing for repair businesses
poor collection, tracking, and responsible recycling infrastructure
limited capability for secure data wiping and end-of-life handling
Informality creates scale, but it also creates a trust problem. Consumers buy refurbished devices with uncertainty. Corporate procurement teams hesitate to buy used equipment for mission-critical operations. Regulators see disorder rather than opportunity.
The missing piece is not demand. The missing piece is trust infrastructure.
To industrialise circular tech, Africa must build the systems that make second-life electronics reliable, safe, and investable. Four building blocks matter most.
If a device is refurbished, it should not rely on seller claims. It should carry evidence-based assurance, such as:
battery health testing standards (minimum thresholds)
verified parts and component authenticity checks
quality grading categories (clear, standardised)
warranty coverage with enforceable terms
traceable provenance: where it came from and what was changed
secure data wiping certification where relevant
Certification is what turns refurbished from “risky bargain” into “trusted option.” It also creates room for tiered markets: budget, standard, premium refurbished.
Without certification, the market remains dominated by uncertainty and price competition, which invites counterfeits and races to the bottom.
A circular economy fails without a return pipeline. You cannot refurbish what you cannot reliably collect.
Collection can be designed through:
device trade-in programmes (mobile operators, retailers, fintechs)
community drop-off centres
school and NGO device renewal programmes
corporate disposal partnerships for laptops and enterprise devices
incentives for returning broken devices rather than dumping them
Collection systems must include secure handling:
certified wiping for devices with sensitive data
controlled dismantling and sorting
safe storage of hazardous components
This is how you move from random salvage to structured supply.
Repair cannot scale if devices are designed to resist repair. Policy and market pressure should push for:
accessible spare parts
documentation and repair manuals
repair-friendly design expectations
restrictions on anti-repair behaviours that lock users out
Right-to-repair is not merely activism. It is an economic enabler. If repair is impossible, replacement becomes the only path, and circularity collapses.
Not everything can be repaired. Some devices must be recycled, and that must happen safely.
That requires:
regulated recycling facilities
incentives for compliant recycling
strict controls against hazardous burning and dumping
training and safety equipment for handlers
transparent tracking so materials do not disappear into informal dumping
Without safe recycling, circularity becomes a health hazard disguised as sustainability.
Africa already has a base layer that many countries had to build from scratch: skilled technicians and repair culture. That is an industrial seed, not a weakness.
The next move is to formalise and scale what already exists:
training programmes with recognised credentials
repair and refurbishment standards
micro-financing and equipment leasing for repair businesses
parts supply chains that reduce counterfeits
partnerships with OEMs, telcos, retailers, and large enterprises
integration into corporate sustainability reporting and procurement policies
This is how the informal economy becomes an investable industry.
If circular tech is to attract serious capital and policy support, stakeholders should evaluate it like infrastructure:
national e-waste frameworks with enforcement, not only guidelines
incentives for trade-in and structured collection
procurement rules allowing certified refurbished devices in public institutions
support for training and certification bodies
anti-counterfeit enforcement in parts markets
certified refurbishment hubs with testing capability
logistics networks for collection and distribution
warranty and service infrastructure
safe recycling plants with compliant processes
digital platforms for provenance tracking and resale trust
The point is to make circular tech legible to capital and governable to regulators.
If done properly, circular tech becomes a rare triple win:
Economic opportunity: jobs, local businesses, reduced import burden
Environmental protection: reduced dumping, safer material handling
Digital inclusion: lower-cost access to devices and services
Africa does not need to invent circular tech culture. It already exists. The opportunity is to turn it into structured industry.
This is not a future project. It is an obvious next sector hiding in plain sight.
Spot something off?