[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fV-TGvXt2MAIKLkvCGCwEzyCNOX-nmqWiZKMCrD_PzRQ":3,"settings":99,"IyN2-ce":177,"$fHgy1ImPNPzJjtw4tPt43fGDyLtiui7Ef-FGkpGfAevg":200},{"id":4,"type":5,"cta":6,"cta_link":7,"created_at":8,"updated_at":9,"owner_id":10,"owner_relationship":11,"views":12,"owner":13,"contributors":29,"article_framework_elements":35,"article_industries":53,"article_locations":77,"involved_organisation":85,"collections":86,"image":17,"view_count":12,"contents":87,"canEdit":98},"IyN2","blog","Learn More","https://circle-economy.com","2025-11-28T12:09:39.000Z","2026-06-07T13:24:37.461Z","ce","no-affiliation",22,{"id":10,"type":14,"owner_id":15,"about":16,"job_title":17,"url":17,"linkedin":17,"email":17,"staff_of_id":17,"organisation_id":10,"organisation":18,"owner":20,"profile":23},"organisation","56NcOv","",null,{"id":10,"name":19,"link":7},"Circle Economy",{"id":15,"first_name":21,"last_name":22},"Circle","Economy",{"id":24,"link":25,"alt":26,"source":17,"created_at":27,"updated_at":28,"article_id":17,"image_profile_id":17,"banner_profile_id":10},"cmm374n1g0001sh01bspouxyc","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/org-profile-avatar/HiKR8W326OYvfBij.jpg","CE logo","2026-02-26T08:23:13.828Z","2026-04-28T13:00:19.131Z",[30],{"contributor_id":10,"contributor":31},{"id":10,"type":14,"owner_id":15,"about":16,"job_title":17,"url":17,"linkedin":17,"email":17,"staff_of_id":17,"organisation_id":10,"organisation":32,"owner":33,"profile":34},{"id":10,"name":19,"link":7},{"id":15,"first_name":21,"last_name":22},{"id":24,"link":25,"alt":26,"source":17,"created_at":27,"updated_at":28,"article_id":17,"image_profile_id":17,"banner_profile_id":10},[36,47],{"article_id":4,"framework_element_id":37,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"framework_element":40},"recycle","2026-04-28T12:52:22.993Z","2025-11-28T12:13:57.000Z",{"id":37,"name":41,"framework_id":42,"created_at":43,"updated_at":43,"framework":44},"Recycle","10R","2026-02-27T04:05:30.859Z",{"id":42,"name":45,"created_at":46,"updated_at":46},"10R Framework","2026-02-27T04:05:28.217Z",{"article_id":4,"framework_element_id":48,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"framework_element":49},"reuse",{"id":48,"name":50,"framework_id":42,"created_at":51,"updated_at":51,"framework":52},"Reuse","2026-02-27T04:05:29.580Z",{"id":42,"name":45,"created_at":46,"updated_at":46},[54,60,65,71],{"article_id":4,"industry_id":55,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"industry":56},"retail",{"id":55,"name":57,"description":58,"sector":59},"Retail","Providing goods on the Internet, through mail order, or television, or providing goods in stores, including apparel, electronics, furniture, food and drug, etc.","goods_and_services",{"article_id":4,"industry_id":61,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"industry":62},"electronics_and_appliances",{"id":61,"name":63,"description":64,"sector":59},"Electronics and Appliances","Producing electronics products for businesses and consumers, including cellular phones, personal computers, printers, servers, electronic computer components and peripherals, TVs, audio equipment, as well as household appliances, such as refrigerators, washing machines, etc.",{"article_id":4,"industry_id":66,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"industry":67},"electrical_and_electronic_equipment",{"id":66,"name":68,"description":69,"sector":70},"Electrical and Electronic Equipment","Producing electric cables and wires, power-generating equipment, including solar modules, motors, power turbines, as well as electronic equipment and instruments, including computer chips, communication equipment, analytical instruments, lasers, display screens, point-of-sales machines, security system equipment, and healthcare equipment","capital_equipment",{"article_id":4,"industry_id":72,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"industry":73},"waste_management",{"id":72,"name":74,"description":75,"sector":76},"Waste Management","Collecting waste from households and businesses by means of refuse bins, wheeled bins, containers, etc., and providing treatment, incineration, materials recovery and reclamation, and disposal of hazardous and non-hazardous waste","societal_services",[78],{"article_id":4,"location_id":79,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"location":80},"360630",{"id":79,"type":81,"name":82,"color":17,"parent_location_id":83,"created_at":84,"updated_at":17},"city","Cairo","EGY","2026-02-27T07:54:47.162Z",[],[],[88],{"id":89,"score":90,"body":91,"status":96,"article_id":4,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"published_at":97},"xSpM",0,{"image":92,"title":93,"content":94,"summary":16,"attachment":95,"imageCaption":16},"https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1777380877493-pG2qLoHj.jpg","Your home is a potential goldmine: the household role in turning WEEE from trash to treasure","\u003Cp id=\"\">Globally, electronic waste, or WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment), is a rapidly growing problem. According to the \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://ewastemonitor.info/the-global-e-waste-monitor-2024/\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">United Nations\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>, in 2023, an average of 8 kilograms of WEEE per person will be generated worldwide, totalling around 61.3 million tonnes. Yet, only 17.4% of this e-waste is properly collected, treated, and recycled. The remaining 50.6 million tonnes will end up stacked in attics, garages and drawers, dumped in landfills, burned, traded illegally, or processed poorly.\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">Europe leads the world in e-waste recycling efforts, driven by the WEEE Directive, which has progressively increased collection targets, from 45% in 2016 to 65% from 2019 onward. Despite this leadership, in 2022, only \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Waste_statistics_-_electrical_and_electronic_equipment\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">40.1% of e-waste in Europe was officially collected and recycled\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>, equivalent to 11.2 kg per inhabitant. However, it is worth noting that collection rates do not automatically mean circular behaviour is being encouraged. Some countries prioritise repair and refurbishment, which extends product life rather than immediately recycling components into raw material streams.\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">As a response to this pressing issue, the EU’s \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/sectors/raw-materials/areas-specific-interest/critical-raw-materials/critical-raw-materials-act_en\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Critical Raw Materials Act\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> (CRM Act), introduced in 2023 with targets set for 2030, aims to source a greater share of minerals domestically and through recycling. Targets include:\u003C/p>\u003Cul id=\"\">\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Domestic extraction: target 10% of EU annual consumption\u003C/strong>. Currently estimated at \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.unpri.org/download?ac=22365\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">less than 2%\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>.\u003C/li>\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Domestic processing: target 40% of annual consumption\u003C/strong>. The European Commission identified \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_25_864\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">24 strategic projects\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> across 13 Member States in 2025, specifically aimed at building domestic processing capacity. Despite this progress, industry and policy analysts say the EU is unlikely to reach its target without a sharp acceleration. Many projects face regulatory delays, local opposition and investment challenges.\u003C/li>\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Recycling: target 25% of annual consumption from recycling sources\u003C/strong>. For some critical materials, the current recycling rate is minuscule. For example, \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/recycling-kick-long-term-solution-eu-rare-earths-challenge-2024-06-27/?utm_source=chatgpt.com\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">less than 1% of rare earths consumed in the EU are recycled\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>.\u003C/li>\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Supply diversification: no more than 65% of annual consumption from a single third country\u003C/strong>. \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/sectors/raw-materials/areas-specific-interest/critical-raw-materials_en\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Dependency remains high\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> for several materials: China supplies 100% of heavy rare earths, Turkey supplies 99% of the EU’s boron, and South Africa supplies 71% of the platinum used in the EU.\u003C/li>\u003C/ul>\u003Ch3 id=\"\">Inside homes: Untapped wealth of unused electronics\u003C/h3>\u003Cp id=\"\">A \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.rsc.org/news/2022/may/precious-elements-new-campaign-highlights-need-for-more-sustainable-electronics\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">survey\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> by the Royal Society of Chemistry focusing on UK households found that over half have at least one unused electronic device, with 45% of homes holding up to five such gadgets. Extrapolated, this could mean as many as 40 million unused devices lying idle. Across the EU, between \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://circulairekennis.nl/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/O013-Onderzoek-naar-retourmogelijkheden-van-kleine-gadgets.pdf\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">25% and 50% of Europeans keep their old, unused devices\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>, and in some cases, the total number of stored devices can exceed the population, depending on the source and geographic scope. In 2024, \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Green_ICT_-_digital_devices_in_households\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">51% of EU individuals aged 16 to 74 reported simply keeping their old mobile phones\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> in their households.\u003C/p>\u003Cfigure id=\"\" class=\"w-richtext-figure-type-image w-richtext-align-fullwidth\" style=\"max-width:1398px\" data-rt-type=\"image\" data-rt-align=\"fullwidth\" data-rt-max-width=\"1398px\">\u003Cdiv id=\"\">\u003Cimg id=\"\" alt=\"Article content\" src=\"https://cdn.prod.website-files.com/5d26d80e8836af2d12ed1269/6929910244682999ab6281a1_1764153970627.jpeg\" width=\"auto\" height=\"auto\" loading=\"auto\">\u003C/div>\u003Cfigcaption id=\"\">Photo by Lukas Werner\u003C/figcaption>\u003C/figure>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cbr>Despite well-established collection systems for Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) across the EU, such as kerbside collection and retailer take-back schemes, recycling rates remain suboptimal. A \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://weee-forum.org/ws_news/e-waste-experts-urge-public-stop-trashing-electronic-products-with-ordinary-garbage/\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">2022 survey by the WEEE Forum\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> revealed several key reasons behind consumer reluctance to recycle e-waste: nearly half of Europeans keep unused electronics because they might use them again, while others hold onto devices intending to resell or gift them, or due to sentimental attachment. A notable portion also retains electronics because they value the potential future worth or lack confidence in how to dispose of them properly. This reluctance stems from a combination of habitual behaviour, perceived economic or emotional value, and insufficient awareness or trust in local recycling systems. As a result, many devices accumulate in homes instead of entering formal recycling channels, impeding the circular economy's full potential and the recovery of critical raw materials essential to Europe’s sustainability goals.\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">Improving consumer awareness, providing clear information on disposal options, and strengthening trust in responsible handling are crucial steps to overcoming these barriers and boosting e-waste recycling participation across the EU.\u003C/p>\u003Ch3 id=\"\">EU policy momentum\u003C/h3>\u003Cp id=\"\">The EU has introduced several measures that will help, including the \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?qid=1583933814386&uri=COM:2020:98:FIN\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Circular Economy Action Plan\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> (CEAP), proposals to strengthen the “\u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/policies/right-to-repair-products/#:~:text=30%20May%202024)-,Obligation%20to%20repair,vacuum%20cleaners%20or%20mobile%20phones.\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">right to repair\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>”, \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2023/1542/oj\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">new battery regulations\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>, and the move to \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://commission.europa.eu/news-and-media/news/eu-common-charger-rules-power-all-your-devices-single-charger-2024-12-28_en\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">USB Type-C as a standard charger\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> by 2024 and for laptops by 28 April 2026. Those rules should reduce waste growth and improve repair and reuse options. Still, policy alone will not collect the untapped resources sitting in households.\u003C/p>\u003Ch3 id=\"\">Turning the tide: Households as a resource\u003C/h3>\u003Cp id=\"\">Households represent a substantial, underused supply of recoverable materials. Household electronics contain a surprising array of valuable substances: precious and base metals, rare earth elements, copper, lithium and other battery metals that are worth recovering. Even small devices can be rich in recoverable material when aggregated across millions of homes. A recent \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://evertiq.com/news/2025-10-16-billions-in-raw-materials-hidden-in-europes-old-smartphones\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">report\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> by Fraunhofer and refurbed estimates that annual professional recycling of EU household smartphones could recover 5,258 tonnes of cobalt, 431 tonnes of tin, 129 tonnes of magnesium, 43 tonnes of tungsten, 1.3 tonnes of palladium and 8.6 tonnes of gold. Valued at market prices in 2025, the total worth of these metals in unused smartphones is estimated at €1.1 billion.\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">With such potential in mind, here are some practical actions individuals can take today to contribute to circularity and resource recovery:\u003C/p>\u003Cul id=\"\">\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Choose durable, repairable products.\u003C/strong> Look for brands that supply spare parts, service manuals and modular designs. Long warranties help too. Fairphone is a well-known example of a European brand that embraces durability and reparability. \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://shop.fairphone.com/nl/fairphone-5\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Fairphone 5\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> offers ten swappable spare parts, a modular design, eight years of software updates, and a five-year warranty. \u003C/li>\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Repair before replacing.\u003C/strong> Use local repair cafés, independent repair shops or manufacturer repair programmes. Repair extends product life and delays entry into waste streams. The network of the \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://repair.eu/our-network/\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Right to Repair campaign\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> is made up of organisations based in several European countries and representing civil society organisations, repair businesses, community repair initiatives and public institutions.\u003C/li>\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Buy second-hand or refurbished.\u003C/strong> This lowers demand for freshly mined materials and gives devices a second life. \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.backmarket.nl/nl-nl\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Back Market\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> is a leading pan-European marketplace for refurbished electronics, active in over 16 countries. It specialises in smartphones, laptops, tablets, and other consumer electronics with quality-checked products and warranties.\u003C/li>\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Use clear take-back schemes.\u003C/strong> Check local kerbside options, click-and-collect schemes at retailers, or municipal collection events. Using digital platforms that explain what to do with specific items can make recycling far easier. For example, \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.linkedin.com/posts/media-markt-saturn_mediamarkt-saturn-sustainability-activity-7258009947362283520-0aC9/\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">MediaMarktSaturn\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>, one of Europe’s largest consumer electronics retailers, offers a wide range of circular services across its stores in Germany. These include trade-in programmes, repair and maintenance of electronic devices, resale and recycling options, exchange of old mobile phones for gift cards, an expanding range of refurbished products, and the collection and disposal of old electronic appliances across all MediaMarkt and Saturn stores.\u003C/li>\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Donate or sell responsibly.\u003C/strong> Passing on working devices to family, friends or to the secondhand store reduces new production and stretches the embedded resources further.\u003C/li>\u003Cli id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Store with a plan.\u003C/strong> If an old device is kept for potential future use, label it and set a reminder to reassess its value in six months. That helps avoid indefinite hoarding.\u003C/li>\u003C/ul>\u003Cp id=\"\">Policy changes are essential, but so is citizen action. Households can unlock a significant stream of critical raw materials simply by repairing, returning, donating or recycling unwanted electronics. Turning “trash” into treasure starts at home, and every device that is reused or recycled reduces dependence on imported materials, supports circular industry jobs and keeps valuable resources in play.\u003C/p>\u003Ch1>—\u003C/h1>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cem id=\"\">Learn more\u003C/em>\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">Circle Economy has a proven track record of designing and implementing impactful circular economy strategies worldwide, rethinking circularity to ensure successful citizen uptake and broad societal adoption. Under the \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.switchtocircular.eu/value-chains/electronics-ict\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">SWITCH2CE\u003C/strong>\u003C/a> project in Egypt, we are leading capacity development to train local personnel and TVET graduates to adopt practices that enable circular transitions within the electronics sector.\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">Our team possesses the skills, experience, and mindset necessary to design and implement impactful circular economy strategies with and for you. Let us guide you on your circular journey!\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">You can reach out to us via our \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.circle-economy.com/contact\" target=\"_self\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">contact form\u003C/strong>\u003C/a>. \u003C/p>",[],"published","2026-01-13T09:13:39.000Z",false,{"data":100,"meta":176},{"id":101,"documentId":102,"createdAt":103,"updatedAt":104,"publishedAt":105,"nav_secondary":106,"nav_primary":107},74,"cq0rcn2xoi5no1yfyvbgyln1","2025-06-22T14:25:01.818Z","2026-05-26T16:26:38.254Z","2026-05-26T16:26:38.726Z",[],[108,113,141,146,151,171],{"id":109,"label":110,"url":111,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":112},699,"About","/about",[],{"id":114,"label":115,"url":116,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":117},703,"Focus areas","programmes",[118,121,125,129,133,137],{"id":119,"label":115,"url":120},1651,"/programmes",{"id":122,"label":123,"url":124},1652,"Cities & regions","/programmes/cities",{"id":126,"label":127,"url":128},1653,"Finance & economics","/programmes/finance",{"id":130,"label":131,"url":132},1654,"Textiles & fashion","/programmes/textiles",{"id":134,"label":135,"url":136},1655,"Jobs & employment","/programmes/jobs",{"id":138,"label":139,"url":140},1656,"Global value chains","/programmes/value-chains",{"id":142,"label":143,"url":144,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":145},700,"Services","/services",[],{"id":147,"label":148,"url":149,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":150},701,"Impact","/impact",[],{"id":152,"label":153,"url":154,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":155},704,"CGR","/cgr",[156,159,163,167],{"id":157,"label":158,"url":154},1657,"About CGR",{"id":160,"label":161,"url":162},1658,"CGR Global","/cgr/cgr-global",{"id":164,"label":165,"url":166},1659,"CGR Nations","/cgr/cgr-national",{"id":168,"label":169,"url":170},1660,"CGR Regions & cities","/cgr/cgr-regions-cities",{"id":172,"label":173,"url":174,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":175},702,"Resources","/knowledge-hub/search",[],{},[178,184,190,195],{"id":179,"title":180,"type":5,"image":181,"isCE":182,"edit":98,"date":183},"tmb2","How circular lighting is delivering real-world impact\n","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/wOf3ePYLd-ai-nTe.jpg",true,"2026-05-26T13:33:16.876Z",{"id":185,"title":186,"type":187,"image":188,"isCE":182,"edit":98,"date":189},"ybP6","Clothing the Footwear Loop","report","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/kE_4C1VwqpD5in2K.jpg","2026-06-01T08:57:59.120Z",{"id":191,"title":192,"type":5,"image":193,"isCE":182,"edit":98,"date":194},"bKZM"," Why economic growth hides a massive loss of value","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/PAZpy33DFUnu55sI.jpg","2026-05-26T13:14:50.950Z",{"id":196,"title":197,"type":187,"image":198,"isCE":182,"edit":98,"date":199},"fIcd","Building movements in the informal economy: Lessons for advancing labour rights in the circular economy","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/zW1aMtSn3z5zkRmH.jpg","2026-06-04T09:12:05.528Z",{"likeCount":90,"isLiked":98}]