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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.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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