Blog Ecobraz Eigre
The circular economy model that technology manufacturers have been waiting for
Introduction to the Circular Economy in the Technology Industry
The technology industry faces growing challenges related to sustainability, resource consumption and conscious disposal. The circular economy model has emerged as a strategic solution, promoting reuse, recycling and extending the life cycle of technological equipment.
Circular Economy Fundamentals
The circular economy is based on three essential pillars: reducing raw material consumption, reusing components and recycling efficiently. In the technology sector, the focus is on sustainable design, which facilitates the disassembly and reuse of materials.
Brazilian Legislation and Applied Regulations
Brazil regulates the management of technological waste through the National Solid Waste Policy (Law No. 12.305/2010), which establishes shared responsibilities and targets for the proper treatment of this waste. In addition, the National Solid Waste Management Information System (SINIR) provides guidelines for compliance and planning.
Impact of the Circular Economy on the Technological Production Chain
The adoption of circularity makes it possible to reduce waste and save natural resources, which are essential for an industry that depends on critical raw materials such as rare metals. The need to implement processes for collecting electronic waste scheduling electronics that guarantee the return of equipment to the production cycle is highlighted.
Sanitization and Security in the Disposal of Media and Hard Drives
Information security is a crucial aspect when dealing with used technological equipment. Processes for safe disposal, such as sanitization of electronic hard drives scheduling, ensure the protection of sensitive data and legal compliance, which are essential for reliable operations.
Operational and Environmental Benefits for B2B Decision Makers
Implementing the circular model provides competitive advantages, such as reduced operating costs, compliance with ESG (Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance) requirements, and alignment with public policies and regulatory demands. The application of technical standards, such as those published by NIST (nvlpubs.nist.gov), reinforces the solidity of the process.
Conclusion and Paths to Implementation
The circular economy model is the format that the technology sector needs to promote sustainability and innovation. Adherence to current legislation, the integration of safe collection and disposal processes, and investment in design for circularity are fundamental steps for the sector to move forward.
ManifestTransparency & Security Manifesto
Evidence and transparency: Our ESG approach is built on traceable documentation, verifiable records and auditable operational criteria. We turn electronic waste management into operational evidence to support governance, traceability and the mitigation of environmental, documentary and corporate risks. Documentary security and compliance: Documented traceability helps reduce regulatory exposure, strengthens documentary defensibility and supports alignment with applicable environmental policies, corporate contracts and governance requirements, including national and international references relevant to supply chains. Operational costing of reverse logistics: Door-to-door collection and responsible processing of electronic waste involve relevant logistics, technical and documentary costs. For this reason, Ecobraz structures transparent operational costing models linked to reverse logistics execution, with no promise of financial return, investment or asset appreciation. Governance: Operational execution is guided by compliance, traceability and verifiable documentation criteria. The priority is to strengthen the client’s corporate evidence, reduce documentary gaps and support safer, more responsible and defensible disposal decisions.
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