Q&A

Want to learn more about e-waste management at Ecoport? Would you like to cooperate with us? We encourage you to read the list of frequently asked questions below. If you can’t find the answer to your question, be sure to contact us.

If you can’t find the answer to your question, be sure to contact us.

Yes, you can sell e-waste in any quantity at our buy-back centre. Contact us in person at our registered office: Ecoport Sp. z o.o. sp. k., ul. Podkolejowa 1/5a 42-200 Częstochowa.

We buy small electronic waste from computers, server rooms, telecommunication devices, as well as from household appliances and audio/video devices. We buy, among others: HDDs, CD/DVD drives, floppy disk drives, computer power supplies, telecommunication boards, PCBs, motherboards, RAM and others. Before you give us your electronic waste make sure it is listed in our price list or contact us.

We update the electronic waste price list directly on our website. You can find it here LINK. You can also ask our staff directly about the price of e-waste or call the office +48 782 781 781. For large wholesale deliveries, we recommend contacting our sales representative, who will prepare an individual offer for you.

We cooperate with individual and commercial clients in Poland and abroad. We will be happy to establish cooperation with e-waste buy-back centres, entities producing electronic waste in the course of their business, manufacturers of computer electronics and electronics of household appliances and audio/video devices, as well as waste electrical and electronic equipment processing plants in Poland and abroad.

Yes, we work with companies both from Poland and from European countries. We purchase and process waste electronic components from computers, household appliances and audio/video devices as well as fractions from the processing of waste electronic equipment. Contact us to complete the necessary formalities and arrange convenient terms of cooperation.

Yes, we have a vehicle fleet and, based on previous arrangements with customers, we can collect electronic scrap from our Partners both from Poland and businesses operating abroad.

E-waste (electronic waste, electronic scrap) is otherwise broken, technologically obsolete or redundant electronic equipment, the repair or further use of which is not economically justified. Electronic waste can include washing machines, vacuum cleaners, computers, battery-operated toys, mobile phones, automotive batteries and accumulators, etc.

Dependence on cutting-edge technology forces us to keep up with current trends, and this is good news for electrical equipment suppliers. Fortunately, there are global environmental initiatives that build awareness of safe waste management. Among them, it is worth distinguishing the active Right to Repair movement. The main postulate of the Right to Repair is to force manufacturers to have greater respect for the lifespan of electronic devices. Technology manufacturers should give consumers the right to repair their devices instead of forcing them to buy new ones.

Environmental education should be carried out continuously and in two ways – separately for technology suppliers and separately for consumers. We are all responsible! After all, what people have produced and improperly managed will backfire on their health. It is never too late to draw a lesson and change our habits!

Dependence on cutting-edge technology forces us to keep up with current trends, and this is good news for electrical equipment suppliers. Fortunately, there are global environmental initiatives that build awareness of safe waste management. Among them, it is worth distinguishing the active Right to Repair movement. The main postulate of the Right to Repair is to force manufacturers to have greater respect for the lifespan of electronic devices. Technology manufacturers should give consumers the right to repair their devices instead of forcing them to buy new ones.

Environmental education should be carried out continuously and in two ways – separately for technology suppliers and separately for consumers. We are all responsible! After all, what people have produced and improperly managed will backfire on their health. It is never too late to draw a lesson and change our habits!