With the US–Israel–Iran war disrupting trade routes, Dubai’s rise-and-shock moment for ITAD and e-scrap is the story of 2026: The United Arab Emirates (UAE), which had evolved into a command center for global flows, was abruptly recast as a chokepoint by the conflict. The situation is now forcing a rapid pivot in how US operators think about logistics, value recovery, and compliance.
For much of the past decade, Dubai has quietly displaced the old north-south “dumping ground” pattern, emerging instead as a far more sophisticated node: a centralized, compliance-driven hub serving the Global South.
At the center of that model is Enviroserve’s Recycling Hub in Dubai Industrial City, a nearly 300,000-square-foot mega-facility with a total processing capacity of about 100,000 tons per year and a 96% recovery rate using Swiss-engineered mechanical separation.
For US OEMs and multinationals, the hub functioned as a regional compliance engine, offering R2v3-aligned data destruction, specialized refrigerant recovery, and audit-grade material recovery that could be cleanly documented against internal ESG and Scope 3 targets.
Dubai’s Free Zones, particularly Jebel Ali (JAFZA), amplified that advantage. By allowing mixed secondary hardware to be consolidated, graded, data-sanitized, and re-exported under a relatively predictable customs and tax regime, Dubai became the sorting room for a wide range of Global South markets that lacked their own advanced processing.
As Southeast Asian governments tightened e-waste import controls, more US and European brokers chose to run their material through Dubai first, using a hub-and-spoke model to feed final refiners in Europe and Asia only with “clean,” high-value fractions.
Policy and formalization in the UAE
Regulation helped legitimize this model. On the tax side, the UAE’s 2026 implementation of a reverse charge mechanism (RCM) on domestic scrap metal transactions under Cabinet Decision No. 153 of 2025 shifted VAT liability from the seller to the buyer for B2B metal scrap trades.
By moving accounting responsibility to the recipient, the rule targeted invoice fraud and cash-based gray-market activity in the metal and scrap value chain, aligning practices more closely with EU-style controls and making the UAE a more transparent venue for institutional traders.
For the organized e-scrap and ITAD sector, that transparency translated directly into lower perceived regulatory risk and smoother audits from both tax authorities and corporate compliance teams.
These national moves nested within a broader international tightening. On Jan. 1, 2025, Basel Convention amendments on e-waste took effect, subjecting virtually all transboundary movements of e-waste to the Prior Informed Consent (PIC) procedure.
Exporters now needed explicit approvals from importing and transit countries, Dubai included, before shipping, which pushed more trade into formal channels and reinforced the comparative advantage of large, well-documented hubs like the UAE over ad-hoc regional brokers.
By early 2026, for many US ITAD firms managing global contracts, routing through Dubai was fast becoming the lowest-risk way to maintain a clean chain of custody into MEA.
War at the chokepoint
That logic unraveled almost overnight when hostilities between the US-Israel alliance and Iran escalated in late February 2026 and effectively militarized the Strait of Hormuz.
With traffic through one of the world’s most critical oil and container shipping arteries heavily disrupted, the “safe harbor” narrative around Dubai flipped into something closer to systemic vulnerability. Maritime disruptions left hundreds of thousands of 20-foot equivalent (TEU) stranded on both sides of the Gulf, including containerized mixed e-scrap, waste, electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) fractions, and high-value ITAD loads that had been scheduled for consolidation or onward shipment through the Jebel Al port.
At the same time, the air bridge that underpinned high-velocity components trade, CPUs, GPUs and high-end SSDs suffered a major contraction as carriers pulled capacity from Gulf corridors.
Even modest double-digit percentage reductions in global uplift capacity can radically reprice lanes for time-sensitive cargo, and early estimates of rerouting costs suggested that a single freighter detour around the conflict zone could add tens of thousands of dollars in incremental fuel and crew costs. War-risk insurance exclusions compounded the disruption: with standard protection and indemnity (P&I) policies no longer covering transits into the Gulf, many US ITAD providers found that routing data-bearing equipment through Dubai would directly contradict their own MSAs and internal risk thresholds.
For low-margin, mixed scrap, the combination of emergency conflict surcharges (ECS), extended transit times and compliance exposure turned previously profitable export lanes into net losses almost immediately. As a result, many North American recyclers and brokers hit pause on Dubai-bound movements, effectively “turning off” a hub that had been central to their downstream planning just weeks earlier.
De-globalization and new logistics patterns
With Dubai functionally constrained, the market snapped into a new configuration. On the pricing side, the sudden loss of MEA refurbishment capacity and re-export volume created a vacuum in tested-working enterprise hardware supply.
This was especially acute in components already under structural demand pressure from AI and cloud build-outs, such as server DRAM and enterprise-grade NAND.
US recyclers holding domestic inventory of SSDs and RAM saw values spike as global buyers scrambled to secure stock without relying on Gulf-centered routes.
Operationally, US ITAD operators were pushed into what might be called “forced localization.” Instead of aggregating and exporting significant volumes to Dubai for regional processing, more firms began prioritizing domestic or near-shore treatment, even at higher nominal unit costs.
Others started experimenting with alternative hubs, Singapore for Asia-Pacific, select European ports for EMEA, and Oman or East African ports as limited Gulf-adjacent options, but none replicated Dubai’s pre-war combination of capacity, regulatory familiarity, and logistics connectivity.
Overlaying all of this was the Basel Prior Informed Consent (PIC) framework. The 2025 amendments meant that any route redesign came with a paperwork lag: PIC permits naming UAE or Gulf ports as transit points could not simply be “ported over” to West African, Southeast Asian, or European alternatives. Obtaining fresh permits for new corridors could take months, leaving material stockpiled in US warehouses not just for economic reasons but because the legal authority to export via alternate routes simply was not yet in place.
Compliance as the new competitive edge
This disruption may not only be reshaping physical flows, but we also expect it to further elevate compliance and reporting as a primary competitive differentiator. Under SERI’s R2v3 standard, facilities must identify, monitor, and demonstrate legal compliance across their entire chain of custody, including transit risk and downstream vendor behavior.
When Gulf routes suddenly became uninsured war zones, many Tier 1 operators had no choice but to re-map their downstream vendor networks to preserve conformity with Core 7 (data security) and Core 5 (tracking throughput) requirements.
High-sensitivity assets once consolidated in the Middle East are now being redirected to certified facilities in more politically stable jurisdictions, such as Singapore or EU member states, where insurance and regulatory frameworks remain predictable.
Simultaneously, enterprise clients are tightening expectations in response to emerging climate and ESG disclosure rules, including state-level measures like California’s SB 253 that push for more detailed Scope 3 reporting.
A generic “certificate of destruction” is no longer enough for hardware that may have crossed multiple borders and regulatory regimes. Large buyers increasingly demand mass-balance reporting that quantifies, with reasonable precision, how many pounds of copper, aluminum, plastics, and precious metals were recovered from their specific assets, and where those fractions ultimately landed.
For US recyclers and ITAD firms, geography has now shifted from a background cost factor to a primary risk variable, driven by geopolitics that they cannot control. The same Gulf corridor that recently promised efficient aggregation and advanced processing now sits behind a geopolitical fault line that can nullify PIC permits, complicate insurance, and invert asset values in a matter of days.
In that environment, short-term winners are likely to be operators that can pivot quickly: ramping domestic processing for high-value components, standing up alternative certified hubs, and hardening documentation so that every diversion is traceable in both environmental and data-security terms.
Longer term, the sector is likely to settle into a more distributed, risk-aware pattern in which no single city plays the role Dubai did going into 2026, even as the emirate works to restore its position under the UAE’s Net Zero 2050 strategy.
For a business built on “urban mining,” the unfolding events in the Middle East are a reminder that the richest ore bodies, data centers, offices and consumer devices still sit on a shifting map of chokepoints, influenced by alliances and conflicts.
Given these conditions, firms should treat that map as part of their core strategy, rather than a fixed backdrop. Doing so will help you maintain continuity when the next shock hits.























