The Circular Economy: How Tech Trade-Ins Are Reshaping the Industry
How the shift from a linear to circular economy model is transforming the consumer electronics industry.
DepxTech Team
Published on July 8, 2025

How the shift from a linear to circular economy model is transforming the consumer electronics industry.
DepxTech Team
Published on July 8, 2025

The traditional tech industry follows a linear model: extract materials, manufacture devices, sell them, and eventually discard them. This take-make-waste approach is unsustainable on a planet with finite resources.
The circular economy offers an alternative: keep products and materials in use for as long as possible, then recover and regenerate them at the end of their service life.
1. Reuse When you trade in a working device, it most often gets refurbished and resold. This is the highest-value form of circularity:
Legislation in the EU and several US states now requires manufacturers to:
Companies like Fairphone are leading the way with modular smartphones where individual components can be replaced. While still niche, this approach could become mainstream as repair legislation expands.
More retailers and manufacturers are integrating trade-in directly into the purchase flow:
The circular economy for electronics is still in its early stages. Currently, only about 20% of global e-waste is formally collected and processed. But the trends are promising:
Every trade-in contributes to the circular economy. By choosing to trade in rather than discard, you're:
Trade in your old devices on DepxTech and be part of the solution. Together, we can build a tech industry that works within planetary boundaries.
How the shift from a linear to circular economy model is transforming the consumer electronics industry.
DepxTech Team
Published on July 8, 2025

The traditional tech industry follows a linear model: extract materials, manufacture devices, sell them, and eventually discard them. This take-make-waste approach is unsustainable on a planet with finite resources.
The circular economy offers an alternative: keep products and materials in use for as long as possible, then recover and regenerate them at the end of their service life.
1. Reuse When you trade in a working device, it most often gets refurbished and resold. This is the highest-value form of circularity:
Legislation in the EU and several US states now requires manufacturers to:
Companies like Fairphone are leading the way with modular smartphones where individual components can be replaced. While still niche, this approach could become mainstream as repair legislation expands.
More retailers and manufacturers are integrating trade-in directly into the purchase flow:
The circular economy for electronics is still in its early stages. Currently, only about 20% of global e-waste is formally collected and processed. But the trends are promising:
Every trade-in contributes to the circular economy. By choosing to trade in rather than discard, you're:
Trade in your old devices on DepxTech and be part of the solution. Together, we can build a tech industry that works within planetary boundaries.