ITAD · Certification

R2v3 vs. e-Stewards: Which ITAD Certification Actually Matters?

Standard Mobile Company ResearchApril 8, 202610 min read

When an enterprise begins evaluating ITAD providers, the first filter is always certification. Does the provider hold R2? e-Stewards? Both? Neither? The certification question is the baseline credibility check—the ITAD equivalent of asking a financial advisor whether they are a fiduciary.

But most enterprise buyers do not actually understand what these certifications require, how they differ, or which one matters for their specific situation. They see the logos on a vendor’s website and check the box. That is a mistake, because R2v3 and e-Stewards are not interchangeable. They reflect fundamentally different philosophies about how retired electronics should be managed, and the choice between them has real implications for your disposition program.

2 standards
R2v3 (SERI) and e-Stewards (BAN) — the only third-party ITAD certifications with global credibility

The Organizations Behind the Standards

R2v3: Sustainable Electronics Recycling International (SERI)

The R2 standard—formally, the Responsible Recycling standard—was developed through a multi-stakeholder process convened by the U.S. EPA beginning in 2006. The EPA brought together recyclers, OEMs, state regulators, and environmental groups to create a consensus standard for the electronics recycling industry. The result was R2, first published in 2008.

The standard is now administered by SERI (Sustainable Electronics Recycling International), an independent organization that manages certification, accreditation of auditing bodies, and standard revisions. The current version, R2v3, was released in 2020 and represents a significant update from R2:2013, particularly in data security requirements and downstream due diligence.

R2 is the most widely adopted ITAD certification in North America. As of 2026, approximately 900 facilities hold R2 certification globally, with the majority in the United States and Canada.

e-Stewards: Basel Action Network (BAN)

The e-Stewards standard was created by the Basel Action Network (BAN), a nonprofit environmental organization focused on confronting the global environmental injustice of toxic trade. BAN was founded in 1997 and has been a vocal critic of the export of hazardous e-waste from developed countries to developing nations.

e-Stewards was launched in 2009 as an alternative to R2, driven by BAN’s belief that the R2 standard did not go far enough in restricting the export of hazardous electronics to developing countries. The philosophical foundation of e-Stewards is rooted in the Basel Convention—the international treaty governing the transboundary movement of hazardous waste.

e-Stewards has a smaller footprint than R2, with approximately 180 certified facilities globally. It is concentrated among larger ITAD providers and is particularly prevalent among vendors serving financial services, healthcare, and government clients.

The Side-by-Side Comparison

Both standards address the same core areas: environmental management, data security, worker health and safety, and downstream accountability. But they differ significantly in scope, strictness, and philosophy.

Requirement AreaR2v3e-Stewards
Environmental Management SystemRequired. Must conform to ISO 14001 or equivalent.Required. Must be ISO 14001 certified (not just conformant).
Health & Safety ManagementRequired. Must conform to ISO 45001 or equivalent.Required. Must be ISO 45001 certified.
Quality ManagementNot required (recommended).Not required (recommended).
Data SecurityComprehensive requirements aligned with NIST 800-88. Must implement data sanitization program with documented procedures, verification, and per-device tracking.Comprehensive requirements aligned with NIST 800-88. Substantially similar to R2v3 in current versions.
Export of Hazardous E-WastePermitted to countries with legal frameworks for receiving. Requires documented compliance with importing country’s laws and Basel Convention where applicable.Prohibited to developing countries (Basel Convention Annex VII non-listed). Strict no-export policy for hazardous e-waste.
Export of Functional/Tested EquipmentPermitted. Must document functionality testing and compliance with destination country regulations.Permitted with conditions. Must demonstrate equipment is fully functional and tested before export.
Downstream Vendor ManagementMust audit downstream vendors through two tiers. Must maintain approved vendor list with documented due diligence.Must audit downstream vendors through the final disposition. More extensive chain-of-custody requirements.
GPS TrackingNot required.Required for all export shipments. BAN uses GPS trackers to verify compliance (the “e-Trash Transparency Project”).
Prison LaborPermitted with restrictions (proper training, safety standards).Prohibited.
Audit FrequencyAnnual third-party audit by accredited certification body.Annual third-party audit by accredited certification body. BAN also conducts independent spot-checks.

Where They Agree

Despite their differences, R2v3 and e-Stewards converge on the fundamentals. Both require:

Where They Diverge

The Export Question

The single largest philosophical difference between R2v3 and e-Stewards is their treatment of electronics exports to developing countries.

e-Stewards takes a restrictive position: hazardous e-waste (as defined by the Basel Convention) may not be exported to developing countries, period. This reflects BAN’s founding mission and the organization’s view that developed countries should not use developing nations as dumping grounds for their toxic waste. e-Stewards does permit the export of tested, functional equipment—but the burden of proof is on the certified facility to demonstrate that the equipment is genuinely functional, not simply relabeled waste.

R2v3 takes a permissive-with-conditions position: export of used electronics is permitted if it complies with the laws of both the exporting and importing countries and if the materials are managed responsibly at their destination. R2v3 requires documented due diligence on downstream vendors in the receiving country, but it does not impose a blanket prohibition on export to developing nations.

This difference is not academic. It has real operational implications for ITAD providers with international remarketing channels and for enterprises whose retired hardware may ultimately be sold to buyers in Africa, Southeast Asia, or South America.

The export question is where philosophy meets commerce. R2v3 says: responsible export to developing countries can extend hardware life and bridge the digital divide. e-Stewards says: the risk of hazardous waste dumping disguised as reuse is too high to allow it.

ISO Certification vs. Conformance

R2v3 requires that facilities implement environmental and health/safety management systems that conform to ISO 14001 and ISO 45001. This means the systems must meet the standards’ requirements but do not need to be independently certified to those standards.

e-Stewards requires actual certification to ISO 14001 and ISO 45001 by an accredited registrar. This is a higher bar—it means an additional audit process, additional cost, and ongoing surveillance audits specifically for the ISO certifications.

For larger ITAD providers, this distinction is minimal—most already hold ISO certifications. For smaller facilities, the additional cost and administrative burden of maintaining three certifications (e-Stewards plus ISO 14001 plus ISO 45001) can be significant.

Downstream Depth

Both standards require downstream vendor management, but the depth differs. R2v3 requires due diligence through two tiers of downstream vendors. e-Stewards requires tracking through the final disposition of materials—which in practice can mean auditing three, four, or more tiers of the downstream chain.

For materials that are recycled domestically, this difference is modest. For materials that enter international commodity markets (copper, precious metals, plastics), tracking through final disposition becomes extremely challenging. e-Stewards’ requirement is more rigorous, but it is also more difficult to verify in practice.

BAN’s GPS Tracking Program

One of e-Stewards’ most distinctive features is BAN’s e-Trash Transparency Project. BAN places GPS tracking devices in electronics delivered to certified recyclers and monitors where the devices end up. If a tracker surfaces in a developing country, BAN investigates and can revoke certification.

This enforcement mechanism has no equivalent in the R2 program. BAN has publicly identified several facilities whose materials ended up in locations inconsistent with their certification claims. The GPS tracking program gives e-Stewards a level of enforcement credibility that is unique in the industry.

Which Certification Do Enterprise Buyers Demand?

The answer depends on the industry and the buyer’s risk profile.

IndustryTypical RequirementWhy
Financial services (banking, insurance)e-Stewards preferred, R2v3 acceptedRegulatory scrutiny on data security and ESG. Strictest standard signals minimum risk.
Healthcaree-Stewards preferred, R2v3 acceptedHIPAA liability. Hospitals and health systems default to the most conservative option.
Federal governmentR2v3 required (GSA schedule vendors)R2 was developed with EPA participation. Federal procurement references R2 specifically.
State and local governmentR2v3 or e-StewardsVaries by jurisdiction. Some states reference R2; others accept either.
Technology companiesR2v3 or e-StewardsMost accept either. Larger companies (FAANG, enterprise software) often prefer e-Stewards for ESG reporting.
Higher educationR2v3 or e-StewardsOften driven by state contract requirements or sustainability office preference.
Manufacturing / industrialR2v3 (cost-conscious)Less ESG pressure. R2v3’s flexibility on export aligns with value-recovery priorities.
Retail / consumer goodsR2v3 or e-StewardsDriven by corporate sustainability commitments, which vary widely.

In practice, the majority of enterprise RFPs accept either certification. A smaller but significant subset—concentrated in financial services, healthcare, and large technology companies—specify e-Stewards as a preference or requirement.

Dual Certification

Many of the largest ITAD providers hold both R2v3 and e-Stewards certification. This eliminates the question entirely for enterprise buyers and allows the provider to serve clients across all industries.

Dual certification is expensive (two audit cycles, two sets of fees, compliance with both frameworks simultaneously) and operationally complex (e-Stewards’ export restrictions may conflict with R2v3’s permissive export policies, requiring the provider to maintain separate operational tracks). But for providers serving Fortune 500 clients, dual certification is increasingly a market requirement rather than a competitive advantage.

Beyond the Certificate: What to Actually Verify

Certification is necessary but not sufficient. A certificate on the wall tells you that a facility passed an audit on a specific date. It does not tell you what happens on the days between audits. When evaluating an ITAD provider, verify these operational realities regardless of which certification they hold:

  1. Ask for recent audit findings. A clean audit is good. A provider willing to share their corrective actions from the last audit is better—it demonstrates operational transparency and continuous improvement.
  2. Request downstream vendor documentation. Not a list of vendor names. Actual documentation: audit reports, compliance certifications, and evidence of ongoing monitoring. If the provider cannot produce this within 48 hours, their downstream program is performative.
  3. Verify data sanitization tooling. Which software tools do they use? Are they qualified for all media types in your inventory (HDD, SSD, NVMe, tape)? When were they last updated? Are operators trained and certified on the tools?
  4. Visit the facility. No amount of documentation substitutes for seeing the operation. How is incoming material secured? How are data-bearing devices tracked through the facility? Where is sanitization performed, and is the area access-controlled? What does the staging area look like?
  5. Check enforcement history. Has the provider ever had a certification suspended or revoked? Have they appeared in any BAN GPS tracking investigations? Have they been cited by state environmental agencies?
  6. Review insurance coverage. Adequate liability insurance (including errors and omissions, pollution liability, and cyber liability) is a sign of a provider that takes risk management seriously.
The best ITAD provider is not the one with the most logos on their website. It is the one that can answer every operational question you ask within 48 hours, with documentation.

The Bottom Line

R2v3 and e-Stewards are both credible, rigorous, third-party-audited certification standards. Either one places a provider in the top tier of the ITAD industry. The choice between them comes down to three factors:

What matters more than which certification a provider holds is whether they actually operate to the standard’s requirements every day, not just on audit days. Ask the hard questions. Request the documentation. Visit the facility. The certificate is the starting point, not the finish line.

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