Fairphone's Supply Chain Revolution: Changing the World, a Handset at a Time

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Monaco, E. (2014). Fairphone’s Supply Chain Revolution: Changing the World, a Handset at a Time. Solutions 5(4): 35-39. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/fairphones-supply-chain-revolution-changing-the-world-a-handset-at-a-time/

Perspectives Fairphone’s Supply Chain Revolution: Changing the World, a Handset at a Time by Edoardo Monaco

Fairphone / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

Fairphones are fully recyclable and responsibly produced in China using conflict-free minerals sourced from the DRC.

T

he really “smart” phone of the future? Fully recyclable, responsibly produced in the People’s Republic of China, and built on blood-free minerals from Congo’s South Kivu province. Good news: in Amsterdam, apparently, the future has just begun, since a young organization is attempting to change the way we look at our mobiles and—more in general—remind us of the role we play with our daily choices as consumers in defining socio-economic development patterns worldwide. Fairphone, a social enterprise launched in 2013, employs a truly hands-on approach that utilizes existent market forces and supply chain systems to produce smartphones whose every stage of production is

closely monitored to ensure compliance with sustainable practices and fair working conditions. Globalization has meant faster, cheaper, easier trade across the entire world. But that has not necessarily entailed equal levels of well-being and grassroots development for all parties involved. Supply chains have become complex, hard to monitor, and this has occasionally created fertile ground for murky deals, unlawful exploitation, disregard of basic human rights, and even outright incentive for armed conflict and civil strife (e.g., Democratic Republic of Congo’s conflict minerals, Sierra Leone’s blood diamonds, etc.). Fairphone’s founders aim to address this wider problem. Mobile phones represent a mere initial focal point

in sparking a trade-based, consumerdriven, peaceful “revolution.” Fairphone wasn’t founded by experts of the electronics industry, but by activists with a broad mission: reminding consumers about the power of their demand to shape any market. Their roadmap seems reasonably clear: indentifying a common, but at times “socially problematic” manufacturing supply chain; introducing alternative, sustainable practices into all of its stages; setting an example for the industry; and—most of all— providing consumers with a viable alternative that may kindle their conscience. That is, of course, easier said than done. Fairphone has, in fact—purposefully—jumped right into the thick of a series of problems.

www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  July-August 2014  |  Solutions  |  35


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