Tracking Market Conditions

Navigating New Climate Regulations: Impact on ITAD and Strategic Recommendations

With the rapidly deteriorating environment and climate, pressure is mounting on global corporations and even small businesses to address their own environmental posture.  Several regulations, passed or are under consideration, aim at forcing companies to be both transparent and make changes in the way they manage their business to lower climate risk. Continue reading below.
Number of readers who accessed this analysis : 640

By David Daoud
Principal Analyst / Certified ESG Specialist

Executive Overview

With the rapidly deteriorating environment and climate, pressure is mounting on global corporations and even small businesses to address their own environmental posture.  Several regulations, passed or are under consideration, aim at forcing companies to be both transparent and make changes in the way they manage their business to lower climate risk. Part of these regulations is to equip investors and providers of capital with knowledge that would help them decide how to invest and what risk their investments face related to climate risk. But these laws are also designed to inform other stakeholders, apart from investors, who may have direct or indirect interest in the company or may be affected by its activities, such as employees, suppliers, customers and the communities where they operate.

Despite some push back against the laws that are still under consideration, nearly all fortune companies are preparing for greater ESG disclosure going forward. There is a sense of inevitability, and so most large enterprises are working on creating a new internal culture of collaboration among business units and departments to coordinate and tackle ESG. ESG leaders are being hired, and new teams are being formed. Most companies have elevated the ESG oversight to the CxO.  There is now a Chief Sustainability Officer tasked by more than half of large US companies to manage the planning and implementation of ESG in accordance with the laws. But for many companies, ESG has become the responsibility of the most senior leaders of the company, including general counsel, the officer who ensures the company is complying.

The topics of regulating climate risk assessment and reducing its impact are the subject of a passionate debate. While there is a consensus that corporations should be key participants in resolving the climate crisis, many companies and their political backers say they do not endorse what they see as regulations imposed on them by outsiders. This is why the regulations that passed so far are either in Europe or in California, regions where regulators and lawmakers play a significant role in shaping policy. But a regulation in Europe or in California will inevitably impact all companies that do business in those geographies.

Four regulations are expected to affect change in the way companies track and report ESG worldwide. All of these regulations have many things in common and that is to push for transparency, accountability, and standardization of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) disclosures. Two of these regulations are now mandatory, while the two others are work in progress but on the way to becoming mandatory.

In this report, we look at the four laws and directives that are forcing major changes in corporate climate disclosure. We provide pointers as to how these laws are likely to affect the recycling and ITAD sectors, and issue recommendations on how ITAD companies and recyclers should do to prepare for the inevitable transition. One major conclusion is that over time, these laws are expected to force a serious consolidation in the industry. This is because preparing for the transition is very complex and costly and will force more transparency in an industry that is accustomed to secrecy and excessive confidentiality. And so not all ITAD companies have the resources to transition and those who insist on no transparency are likely to fade away over time.

Continue blue
Not a client?  Subscription Information Here

Analyst/Author: David Daoud | Analyst

David Daoud has researched the mainstream IT hardware market since 1996 and expanded into hardware disposition research in 2003. He has spearheaded the creation of IDC’s GRADE certification. Since then, David has been providing consulting and expert advice to companies looking to establish best practice in their IT equipment decommissioning and helped leading ITAD service providers assess demand, understand competition, and forecast what’s to come. David is currently the Principal Analyst at Compliance Standards, which focuses entirely on the end-of-life of IT equipment. He can be reached at 508-981-6937 or at ddaoud@compliance-standards.com
Boosting your ITAD performance with Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Boosting your ITAD performance with Artificial Intelligence (AI)

In this paper David Daoud analyzes how ITAD can take advantage of the emerging but rapidly expanding Artificial Intelligence (AI). It addresses what areas and functions AI could improve and influence, what are the basic technologies that constitute AI and what skill sets and staffing requirements are needed for an ITAD company to deploy AI. Finally the report ends with highlighting some of existing challenges confronted by the AI movement.

How End-User Companies Learn About Enterprise ITAD Practices

How End-User Companies Learn About Enterprise ITAD Practices

In this presentation, we share data and analysis on how end-user companies learn about ITAD. This presentation is useful for benchmarking purposes and for identifying who influences decision makers. Clients have access to the video presentation in lecture form, the report in PDF version and a companion audio podcast that can be downloaded as an MP3 file for listening on the go.

Intro: ITAD Industry Performance Update and Outlook

Intro: ITAD Industry Performance Update and Outlook

Let me thank those of you who took our first ITAD Industry Performance Review and Outlook. This survey closed and we have conducted a Zoom presentation on June 29, 2023. For those who took the survey, you must have received links to access a written analysis, PowerPoint slides and a replay of the Zoom video presentation. If you have not received the links, please check your spambox or send me an email

Pulse: Some Signs to Support ITAD Executives’ Optimism on a Better 2H2023

Pulse: Some Signs to Support ITAD Executives’ Optimism on a Better 2H2023

Lately, we have been witnessing renewed optimism in the ITAD sector. A survey of ITAD vendors conducted by Compliance Standards LLC and E-Scrap News indicates that while the industry has been struggling with poor and adverse market conditions in the first half of 2023, ITAD company executives, in their majority, see better times ahead and anticipate an improved market environment in the second half of 2023.

PREMIUM SERVICES

Unique content that clients can use to transform themselves as thought leader. We help customers improve their image, attract attention and win new customers.

This is where professionals involved in ITAD in enterprises come to learn about best practice.

We assess the reputation of ITAD vendors from the perspective of their clients and employees.

Plan Your Go-to-Market, Sales, Marketing and PR Strategies with Unmatched Data & Expertise. Understand your Prospective Clients. All data driven.

Analyst views and opinions on the mega trends and factors affecting the ITAD sector, from ESG to AI and from plant technology to economics.

We welcome all ITAD vendors to join our twice a year survey, a joint initiative between Compliance Standards and E-Scrap News. Joining is free and results are available only for survey respondents.

×

Hello!

Click one of our contacts below to chat on WhatsApp

× Speak to us on WhatsApp