Manchester has cemented its place as the UK’s leading tech city outside London.
MediaCityUK in Salford, the Oxford Road innovation corridor, the growing cluster of digital businesses around Spinningfields and the Northern Quarter have transformed the city into a genuine technology powerhouse.
But with that growth comes a challenge that few people talk about: what happens to all the old IT equipment?
The numbers are difficult to ignore. Greater Manchester is home to over 10,000 digital and technology companies, from two-person startups to global enterprises with hundreds of employees.
Each of those businesses cycles through hardware on a regular basis – laptops every three years, servers every five, networking equipment somewhere in between.
When the new kit arrives, the old kit needs to go somewhere. For too many Manchester businesses, “somewhere” means a storeroom, a cupboard under the stairs, or an
arrangement with a general waste contractor who may have no capability to handle data-bearing equipment securely.
The data problem nobody talks about
Every laptop, desktop, and server that has been used in a business environment contains data. Client contracts, financial records, employee information, login credentials, internal communications – all of it sitting on hard drives that do not erase themselves when the device is switched off.
A factory reset does not solve the problem. Consumer-grade deletion tools leave recoverable data on the drive. For a city full of fintech firms, professional services companies, and digital agencies handling sensitive client work, improperly disposed hardware is a data breach waiting to happen.
Under UK GDPR, the organisation that collected the data remains responsible for it until it is verifiably destroyed. The ICO does not accept ‘we thought it was wiped’ as a defence.
If a retired laptop from a Spinningfields office turns up with recoverable client data, the business that disposed of it faces enforcement action- regardless of how the device left their premises.
The environmental angle
Manchester has set ambitious sustainability targets, and the city’s businesses are under increasing pressure to demonstrate environmental responsibility. Yet electronic waste from commercial IT equipment remains a significant blind spot.
The UK generates approximately 1.5 million tonnes of e-waste annually. Circuit boards contain lead, mercury, and cadmium. Batteries contain lithium and cobalt. When this equipment reaches landfill, those materials leach into the environment.
Professional IT recycling ensures that materials are recovered and reprocessed rather than buried, with a zero-landfill approach that aligns with Manchester’s green ambitions.
What good IT disposal looks like
Professional IT asset disposal follows a clear process. Equipment is collected — typically for free – and transported securely to a processing facility. Every data-bearing device undergoes Blancco-certified wiping to NIST 800-88 standards, producing individual certificates that serve as auditable proof of destruction.
Hardware with remaining useful life is refurbished and resold. Everything else is broken down for materials recovery.
The entire process is documented from collection to final processing, giving businesses the compliance evidence they need for audits, regulatory enquiries, and client due diligence requests.
A city that moves fast should dispose fast too
Manchester prides itself on moving quickly. Its businesses adopt new technology at pace, and its workforce expects modern tools. That same energy should apply to the back end of the hardware lifecycle. Every month that decommissioned equipment sits in storage is a month of unnecessary data risk and wasted office space in a city where commercial rents are climbing steadily.
The solutions exist, they are free, and they are designed to make the process effortless. For a city building its reputation as a responsible, forward-thinking tech hub, getting IT disposal right is simply part of the job.