[Editor’s Note: In this blog post, team members Bibi and Raluca deliver their report on their recent trip to Ghana, where they were accompanied by Joost de Kluijver of Closing the Loop. They discuss the scope of their trip, introduce partners, talk about the meetings they conducted, and give a view of the future developments in the area of recycling e-waste. – Joe Mier, Community Manager]
Addressing electronic waste (“e-waste”) is a pivotal part of Fairphone’s holistic approach to the life cycle of a phone and, we believe, an important part of our responsibility as a phone maker. While most of our work of last year focused more on the first steps of the phone’s life – sourcing minerals, assembly and manufacturing, and product development – we are now engaging in actions to address the phone’s end-of-life phase, as part of our mission statement. We’ve thus partnered with Closing the Loop, a Dutch foundation, to facilitate e-waste recycling in countries where recycling programs are scarce or do not exist. Our overarching goal is to work with local organizations to set up collection programs and awareness-raising projects in areas of the world with severe e-waste problems, and look into the possibility to re-use some of the materials we recycle for our future production.
This blog is a follow-up to our post from the end of November discussing our take-back phone plan in Ghana.
With the purchase of the Fairphone, our buyers invested directly in a program that retrieves at least 75,000 mobile phones that have reached their end-of-life in Ghana. By doing so, together we can ensure that these phones won’t end up becoming dismantled poorly, burned, or dumped creating negative social or environmental impact.
Going forward, these phones should be recycled in the countries where they reach their end-of-life, but this will take some years, major investments and strong partnerships. In the meantime, we hope that taking responsibility for the full lifecycle of our products is the first step to addressing the problems of e-waste.
But let’s take a few steps back: just a little over two weeks ago, my colleague Raluca (a new member of the Fairphone team) and myself set out on our trip to Ghana. The overall purpose of this initial trip was to do research, establish some facts, meet the partners of Closing the Loop and make progress on the project that Closing the Loop has developed since it started over 3 years ago. This included some local awareness-raising but, of course, with a camera at our sides, we hope our trip also serves as some awareness raising amongst our community here, as well. From a more practical point of view, we were in Ghana to inspect how the collection of phones was managed and how community outreach is currently carried out by local partners. We wanted to see for ourselves the phones that had been collected thus far, so we needed to meet and talk to environmental authorities to be able to explain shipping and permit procedures. Lastly, we wanted to meet potential new partners to improve or increase best efforts and local collection and recycling procedures in future stages.
Arriving in Accra, the capital of Ghana, the city embraces you like a cozy blanket. I don’t just mean the way the Ghanaian tropical climate replaced Amsterdam’s first cold days of February, but rather about the openness and friendliness of the people there. “Akwabaa” or “You are welcome” are the first introductory phrases you hear and see. A handshake is firm and concluded with a catchy click between both participants thumb and middle finger. Overall people seem eager to explain everything that goes on in Ghana based on the elaborate answers we get to our many, many questions.
Together with the head of Closing the Loop, Joost de Kluijver, we visited their local Ghanaian project partner “Nana,” a well-connected socially engaged and generous businessman; they had originally been connected through Closing the Loop, and its parent company TechReturns. In addition to other social and business projects, Nana also resells mobile phones in Greater Accra. Therefore he comes across a lot of situations where people (other resellers, repairmen, consumers) have mobile phones that can’t be repaired anymore and nothing to do with it but throw it out as trash or give it to anyone willing to take it for free or even some small fee, usually entering into the less formal, more underground “waste stream” to a dumping and burning ground such as Agbogbloshie.
Agbogbloshie is a suburb of Accra on the banks of the Korle Lagoon, an area that has become an informal dump for electronic waste from illegal shipments coming from industralized countries. When we arrived, we saw plastic covering the pools and water of the Lagoon, where the main activities (dismantling and burning of material) take place on the shore.
The sight of the dump was one of the most poignant, urgent motivations to start putting the electronic waste problem on the agenda and to get our hands dirty going forward with this project. (And shoes! We could not get them clean anymore and two days after visiting the dump, they grew mold).
The export of the 75,000 phones is the end of the project in Ghana in terms of the amount of phones we are able to collect with the premiums of the first 25,000 Fairphones. But of course, this is just the beginning to make a real impact. To be able to set up large-scale professional infrastructure for collection, storing, recycling and consumer mobilization in Ghana, we need more well-connected and reliable partners with the ability to reach out to a lot of people. In that respect and because the problem is too big to solve it on our own, Fairphone and Closing the Loop met with leading mobile phone providers in Ghana to discuss possible ways to collaborate and connect infrastructures in the near future.
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