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Use the form below to tell us about your assets, locations, project deadline and disposal requirements. We will review your enquiry and recommend the most practical next step.

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Contact Solidified

Use the form below to tell us about your assets, locations, project deadline and disposal requirements. We will review your enquiry and recommend the most practical next step.

Your information will only be used by us in line with our Privacy Notice.

Edit Template

Right to Repair Growth: Why UK Businesses Need Better IT Reuse and Disposal Planning

Home / Recycling & Compliance / Recovery & Reuse / Right to Repair Growth: Why UK Businesses Need Better IT Reuse and Disposal Planning

What is happening?

Right to Repair discussions continue gaining momentum across the UK and internationally.

Recent reporting highlights growing pressure for products such as smartphones, laptops and electronics to become easier to repair, maintain and keep in use for longer.

Campaigners, councils, retailers and recycling organisations are increasingly focusing on:

  • Reducing electronic waste;
  • Extending product lifespans;
  • Improving repair access;
  • Increasing reuse and refurbishment;
  • Supporting circular economy initiatives.

Recent UK discussions have included calls for stronger repair rights, longer software support periods and wider availability of spare parts for electronic devices.

At the same time, organisations continue replacing large volumes of workplace IT equipment during refresh projects and infrastructure upgrades.

That creates an important operational question:

What should happen to old IT equipment before it is simply recycled or discarded?


Why this matters

Many old workplace devices still have potential reuse or value recovery opportunities.

This may include:

  • Laptops;
  • Smartphones;
  • Tablets;
  • Monitors;
  • Networking equipment;
  • Office IT peripherals;
  • Workplace electronics.

However, reuse decisions must still balance:

  • Data security;
  • Asset tracking;
  • Device condition;
  • Software support;
  • Operational risk;
  • WEEE responsibilities;
  • Disposal documentation.

Even devices intended for reuse may still contain:

  • Saved credentials;
  • Company data;
  • Cached emails;
  • Browser histories;
  • Customer records;
  • Locally stored documents.

Without proper handling, organisations can face:

  • Weak chain of custody;
  • Missing devices;
  • Unclear data destruction records;
  • poor asset visibility;
  • Uncertainty over final outcomes;
  • Unnecessary waste generation.

That is why reuse and value recovery should form part of a controlled IT asset disposal process rather than an informal equipment clear-out.


What this means for different organisations

Small businesses

Small businesses often store older laptops and phones for years without clear plans for reuse or disposal.

Medium-sized businesses

Medium organisations may manage mixed generations of workplace devices across offices and remote workers.

Large organisations

Large estates generate high volumes of redundant IT equipment during refresh projects, creating significant reuse and recycling decisions.

Multinationals

Global organisations may apply central sustainability strategies while handling reuse and disposal locally under UK requirements.

Public sector organisations

Public sector estates often require strong audit trails and documented handling for devices containing sensitive information.

Contractors and subcontractors

Office relocation teams and facilities contractors frequently encounter reusable or redundant electronics during projects.

MSPs and IT providers

Managed service providers increasingly support clients with lifecycle planning, secure disposal and reuse coordination.


Practical checks before deciding what happens to old IT equipment

Before devices are reused, recycled or physically destroyed, organisations should ask:

  1. Do we have a complete asset inventory?
  2. Which devices may still contain sensitive data?
  3. What requires NIST 800-88 aligned data erasure?
  4. What requires secure physical destruction instead of reuse?
  5. Which assets may still have residual value?
  6. Are unsupported or damaged devices separated correctly?
  7. Are WEEE streams identified properly?
  8. Will reporting and certificates be provided afterwards?
  9. Is chain of custody documented throughout the process?
  10. Who internally approves reuse or disposal decisions?


Where Solidified Ltd supports

Solidified Ltd supports organisations with:

  • Secure IT asset disposal;
  • NIST 800-88 aligned data erasure;
  • Secure physical destruction;
  • WEEE and e-waste recycling;
  • IT refresh disposal;
  • Office relocation clearance;
  • Lease return support;
  • Data centre decommissioning recycling;
  • Value recovery;
  • Workplace recycling education;
  • Responsible recycling.

The focus is on maintaining a controlled and documented process with secure handling, asset tracking, chain of custody and clear audit trails.


Planning an IT refresh, office move or workplace equipment clearance?

Speak to Solidified Ltd before old equipment leaves your control.

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