Virgin Media O2 and environmental charity, Hubbub, have today revealed that more than a quarter of a million people have been reached by the pair’s Time After Time fund which helps to tackle electronic waste and give unused tech a second life. The results show how local communities across the UK are addressing this significant environmental challenge in innovative and impactful ways.
Following the success so far, the organisations are now planning to share the impact and learnings of the fund which has provided grants totalling £1 million to 18 innovative circularity projects nationwide.
Virgin Media O2 and Hubbub established the Time After Time fund in 2022 in response to the nation’s growing e-waste problem, with the UK producing 24Kg of e-waste per person, the second highest amount in the world after Norway.
The fund is one of the ways Virgin Media O2 has exceeded its bold goal to encourage consumers to carry out 10 million circular actions (recycling, reusing, refurbishing and repairing devices), months ahead of its end of 2025 target, as part of its sustainability strategy, the Better Connections Plan.
Impact of the fund
Hundreds of groups applied for grants during two rounds of funding from the Time After Time initiative during 2022-2023 and 2024-2025.
The winners were selected by a panel of expert sustainability judges including TV presenter and environmentalist, George Clarke. Judges awarded funding to applicants that demonstrated how they could drive behaviour change by inspiring people to reuse or donate their unwanted devices, or gain further insight on how to reduce e-waste, and address digital exclusion with unused tech.
From Blackburn to Bristol, and Cornwall to Coventry, charities, community groups and public sector organisations used the funding to deliver events, training and policy recommendations which prevented e-waste, championed reuse, repair or recycling of tech devices. The donated and repaired tech was reused help digitally excluded people get online, and helped marginalised groups build tech repair skills so they could gain employment.
Examples include:
Hubbub and Virgin Media O2 also educated Gen Z about the topic of e-waste to help change their perception of reusing tech after a dedicated Time After Time report revealed Gen Z are the generation most likely to tackle e-waste, but need support to do so. Events were held at universities across the UK, from ‘hackathons’ to find ways to address e-waste, to tech repair fairs allowing students to keep their devices working for longer.
Projects funded by the Time After Time fund have reached more than 260,000 people, with almost 10,000 people donating a device, repairing or recycling broken devices, or attending a workshop. As part of this, 8,000 electricals were repaired, reused or recycled, and more than 60% of donated tech, such as smartphones and tablets, were redistributed with those who need them, and 400 people attended tech repair training courses.
Dana Haidan, Chief Sustainability Officer at Virgin Media O2, said:
“We’re proud of the scale and impact of Virgin Media O2 and Hubbub’s Time After Time fund, and of the hard-working organisations that have delivered these innovative, community-led projects across the UK.
“Whether it’s creating conversations and positive action on tackling e-waste, changing people’s perceptions of reusing, repairing or recycling tech, donating smartphones and tablets to help those who are digitally excluded get online, or delivering device repair skills to help people find jobs, the Time After Time fund has changed people’s lives, enriched communities and helped protect the planet.”
Sharing best practice
Virgin Media O2 and Hubbub have published a new report and are hosting a free webinar at 2.30pm this Thursday (25 September), to help community leaders and organisations learn best practice for running successful projects that bridge the gap between circularity and digital inclusion. Click here to sign up for the webinar.
The report is based on insights from the Time After Time fund, and is packed with case studies, practical advice and recommendations on how to engage people – from schoolchildren to pensioners, and stakeholders, such as MPs, on e-waste and device reuse.
The report comprises five sections with recommendations, which include:
(1) easy to understand,
(2) attractive and appealing to engage with,
(3) involve other people (where possible, e.g. gamification or competition), and
(4) give information at the right time, so it’s both relevant and people have enough time to prepare.
The full report is available here.
Gavin Ellis, Director and Co-Founder of Hubbub said:
“It’s fantastic to see the combined impact of the Time After Time fund changing real lives across the country. Hubbub and Virgin Media O2 are delighted the Fund has supported these projects to grow and adapt to issues like flooding, venue changes and working with vulnerable groups.
“We’re proud to share the Fund’s outcomes and the amazing work of the funded partners that show old devices can transform lives, prevent electricals from becoming e-waste and build stronger communities. We hope more organisations will feel inspired and empowered to support this important mission.”