Right to Repair in India
Kartavya Desk Staff
Syllabus: Environment
Source: TH
Context: India accepted a proposal to introduce a Repairability Index for electronics. This marks a key step towards making the Right to Repair a consumer right.
• However, experts warn that India’s informal repair economy—rich in tacit, generational knowledge—is being neglected in digital and AI policy frameworks.
About Right to Repair in India:
Understanding the ‘Right to Repair’:
• Definition: It refers to the legal right of consumers to repair and modify their own products or access affordable third-party services.
• Global Trend: EU mandates access to spare parts and manuals; U.S. states and the UN SDG 12 also push for repair-based sustainability.
• Indian Framework: Department of Consumer Affairs launched a Right to Repair portal (2023), covering electronics, autos, and farm tools.
Why Repair Must Be More Than a Consumer Right?
• Tacit Knowledge Economy: Informal repairers acquire skills through observation and mentorship, not certifications, making repair an intergenerational knowledge system. E.g. Karol Bagh (Delhi), Ritchie Street (Chennai)
• Sustainability through Jugaad: Repair culture reflects India’s frugality and resourcefulness by extending product life and reducing e-waste.
• Unorganised, Yet Critical Workforce: Informal repairers are excluded from labour policies, despite being central to India’s circular economy.
• Cultural Identity of Repair: Local repair practices carry regional innovation, intuition, and adaptive reuse — a form of indigenous technological heritage.
• Loss of Repair Literacy: Shift towards disposable goods and sealed designs threatens this ecosystem and the social value of reuse.
Digital Policy Gaps:
• Narrow Scope of E-Waste Rules 2022: Rules emphasize recycling but overlook repair as a first-line defence against e-waste.
• PMKVY’s Mismatch: Skill India programs offer rigid modules, which don’t suit improvisational, diagnostic repair work.
• NSAI & DPI Oversight: AI and DPI policy frameworks focus on structured data but neglect informal, human-led knowledge inputs.
• NEP 2020 Gaps: While the NEP values experiential learning, it fails to recognize repair work as a form of skill education.
• No Legal Support for Repairers: Informal workers lack formal rights, certification pathways, or recognition in the digital economy roadmap.
Towards Inclusive and Sustainable Repair Ecosystems:
• AI & DPI Standards: Embed repairability norms in AI systems, hardware standards, and public procurement policies.
• Expanded Right to Repair: Classify products by repairability, ensure access to parts/manuals, and promote community-led repair hubs.
• Skilling Through Recognition: Create recognition and reskilling pathways for informal repairers via e-Shram and custom training modules.
• Knowledge Preservation via AI: Use LLMs and decision trees to translate tacit repair insights into shareable digital formats.
• Policy Convergence: Integrate MoLE, MeitY, and MoRD efforts to create a unified framework valuing repair as both labour and knowledge.
Significance for India’s Development Trajectory:
• Sustainability & SDGs: Supports SDG-12 and Mission LiFE by extending product life, reducing waste, and promoting reuse.
• Labour Empowerment: Recognizes the dignity of informal repairers as skilled contributors to digital and material resilience.
• Digital Justice: Aligns AI growth with inclusion by acknowledging the human inputs behind machine learning and diagnostics.
• Economic Inclusion: Bridges the gap between India’s digital vision and grassroots innovation, creating livelihood security.
• Circular Economy Leadership: Positions India as a global example in integrating repair culture into sustainable economic models.
Conclusion:
As India advances in AI and digital public infrastructure, repair must be seen as both a right and a responsibility. Policies must integrate the silent wisdom of its repair workforce to build a just, inclusive, and sustainable tech future. As Michael Polanyi aptly said, “We know more than we can tell.” It’s time India remembers what it cannot afford to forget.