Moving Beyond Sustainability: Aligning ESG, Budget, and Operational Resilience
The conversation surrounding Information Technology procurement in Africa has reached a turning point. Qrent, a leader in sustainable technology and IT asset lifecycle management, argues that the adoption of Circular IT models is no longer just a checkbox for environmental reports; it is a sophisticated, commercially compelling strategy for the modern enterprise.
For organizations facing the triple threat of budget pressure, currency volatility, and stringent ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) reporting requirements, refurbished technology offers a solution that optimizes performance while minimizing risk.
Historically, IT strategy and sustainability goals were managed in silos. Today, they are colliding at the boardroom level. Qrent highlights several key drivers:
- Scope 3 Emissions: Hardware manufacturing is carbon intensive. By extending the lifecycle of existing devices through professional refurbishment, companies can achieve a quantifiable reduction in their Scope 3 emissions, a critical metric for IFRS S2 compliance and global sustainability mandates.
- Financial Flexibility: Procuring refurbished equipment, often available through local currency-denominated rentals, mitigates the exchange rate risks associated with US dollar-denominated hardware imports.
- Supply Chain Resilience: Circular models reduce reliance on the volatile global supply chains for new hardware, ensuring operational continuity even when markets are constrained.
Beyond the procurement advantages, managing the end-of-life (EOL) phase of IT assets has become a governance issue. In markets where formal e-waste infrastructure is still developing, leaving old hardware to accumulate is a risk to reputation and regulatory compliance.
Qrent’s lifecycle management ensures a verifiable chain of custody. By handling IT asset recovery and responsible recycling, the company provides the documentation needed to prove due diligence and compliance with environmental standards, turning a potential liability into a structured asset recovery process.
A persistent myth in the industry is that choosing refurbished technology requires sacrificing performance. Qrent challenges this, noting that enterprise-grade hardware, when subjected to rigorous refurbishment, testing, and certification, is more than capable of handling the vast majority of business workloads.
“We are not asking organizations to make a values-based decision. We are offering them a better business decision that also happens to be the right environmental decision,” says Kwirirai Rukowo, Managing Executive (MEA) at Qrent.
By integrating Circular IT into the default operating model, African enterprises can move from reactive sustainability to a proactive, resilient, and cost-effective IT strategy.
































