Image Source: Tribune India
India’s electronic waste (e-waste) management landscape has achieved a remarkable milestone in 2024-25, with the national e-waste recovery rate crossing the 70% threshold for the first time, signaling a major compliance transformation under the government’s Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) framework. This leap marks a pivotal moment in the country’s efforts to tackle its growing e-waste crisis through formal, accountable recycling channels, moving away from fragmented informal flows that had dominated the sector for years. According to Shashi Shekhar Shahi, Founder of Foxx Compliance Services Pvt. Ltd., this achievement reflects clearer targets, enhanced traceability via centralized digital portals, and significant investments by serious industry players to scale recycling capacity.
Key Milestones in India’s E-waste Sector
-
India's e-waste generation rose by 11.5% from approximately 1.25 million tonnes in FY 2023-24 to nearly 1.4 million tonnes in FY 2024-25, driven by relentless electronics consumption across the country.
-
The formal sector managed to process close to one million tonnes of e-waste in FY 2024-25, representing a jump in recovery rate from 61.94% in the previous fiscal year to 70.71%.
-
This rise of 8.8 percentage points within a single year is rare in environmental compliance and signals a maturity in producer planning and recycler capacity scaling.
-
India is the third-largest e-waste generator globally, behind China and the United States, encountering persistent challenges to control the volume and hazardous nature of its waste.
A Compliance Revolution Under the EPR Framework
The sweeping improvement in recovery rates is largely credited to the Central Pollution Control Board’s (CPCB) mandated EPR regime, which requires manufacturers, importers, and sellers of electronics to take responsibility for the end-of-life management of their products. This system has gained traction with the introduction of a government-run tracking portal that enforces transparency and traceability of e-waste flows from collection through to final processing.
-
Clearer, enforceable targets for collection and recycling compel producers to plan earlier and allocate resources strategically.
-
The portal’s real-time data monitoring enables regulators and stakeholders to curb informal, untraceable e-waste handling.
-
Investment in formal recycling infrastructure has increased, enabling authorized recyclers to handle higher volumes with environmental safeguards.
-
The acquisition of EPR certificates has become mandatory, enhancing accountability and formalizing relationships between producers and certified recycling units.
Challenges and Opportunities
-
Though the progress is impressive, India’s journey toward sustainable e-waste management is ongoing:
-
Informal sectors still handle a significant portion of discarded electronics, often under hazardous conditions causing health and environmental risks.
-
An estimated 57% of generated e-waste (around 990,000 tonnes) remains untreated annually, highlighting gaps in infrastructure outside the major urban centers.
-
Major cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad, and Pune are central hubs for e-waste generation and require localized solutions to boost collection and recycling.
-
Emerging technologies in metal recovery, bio-leaching, and polymer recycling are being explored to maximize resource retrieval and minimize toxic byproducts.
-
Government incentives, including a USD 180 million critical-minerals recycling subsidy, aim to scale advanced recycling processes to support strategic supply chains such as electric vehicles (EVs) and renewable energy sectors.
Foxx Compliance’s Role and Vision
Foxx Compliance Services Pvt. Ltd., under Shashi Shekhar Shahi’s leadership, epitomizes the new wave of committed players driving India’s formal e-waste sector. The company’s initiatives include setting up environmentally safe recycling facilities, ensuring secure data erasure from devices, and maintaining strict regulatory compliance to protect public health and the environment.
Shahi emphasizes that this compliance turnaround must continue evolving beyond enforcement into widespread acceptance and engagement from all stakeholders—producers, consumers, recyclers, and regulators—to sustain and build on this success. Understanding and justifying the recycling cost structure will be key to long-term environmental stewardship.
In summary, India's e-waste recovery surpassing 70% marks a transformative shift from informal, scattered waste handling to a structured, technologically supported ecosystem. As e-waste volumes keep rising with the country’s digital footprint, this compliance improvement offers hope that India can effectively close the loop and build a sustainable circular economy for electronic products.
Source: ANI, Tribune India
Advertisement
Advertisement