Malta Independent

Europeans get ‘right to repair’ for some electrical goods

-

Companies that sell refrigerat­ors, washers, hairdryers or TVs in the European Union will need to ensure those appliances can be repaired for up to 10 years, to help reduce the vast mountain of electrical waste that piles up each year on the continent.

The “right to repair,” as it is sometimes called, came into force across the 27-nation bloc Monday. It is part of a broader effort to cut the environmen­tal footprint of manufactur­ed goods by making them more durable and energy efficient.

“This is a really big step in the right direction” said Daniel Affelt of the environmen­tal group BUND-Berlin, which runs several “repair cafes” where people can bring in their broken appliances and get help fixing them up again.

Modern appliances are often glued or riveted together, he said. “If you need specialist tools or have to break open the device, then you can’t repair it.”

Lack of spare parts is another problem, campaigner­s say. Sometimes a single broken tooth on a tiny plastic sprocket can throw a proverbial wrench in the works.

“People want to repair their appliances,” Affelt said. “When you tell them that there are no spare parts for a device that’s only a couple of years old then they are obviously really frustrated by that.”

Under the new EU rules, manufactur­ers will have to ensure parts are available for up to a decade, though some will only be provided to profession­al repair companies to ensure they are installed correctly.

New devices will also have to come with repair manuals and be made in such a way that they can be dismantled using convention­al tools when they really can’t be fixed anymore, to improve recycling.

Each year, Europeans produce more than 16 kilograms (35 pounds) of electrical waste per person. About half of that junk is due to broken household appliances, and the EU recycles only about 40% of it, leaving behind huge amounts of potentiall­y hazardous material.

German Environmen­t Minister Svenja Schulze said that in a next step, manufactur­ers should have to state how long a product is expected to work for and repair it if it breaks down earlier. This would encourage companies to build more durable products, she said.

“In the repair cafes we see a lot of devices that broke shortly after the warranty expired,” said Affelt — a phenomenon that has prompted some environmen­talists to accuse manufactur­ers of designing their devices with planned obsolescen­ce.

Knowing an appliance will really last for a decade might prompt consumers to choose products that are more durable or can be easily fixed, he said.

“For the vast majority of devices, repair is the right choice,” said Affelt, adding that the exception might be old, inefficien­t refrigerat­ors that can contain powerful greenhouse gases which fuel climate change.

In a next step, environmen­talists and consumer rights groups want the “right to repair” expanded to include smartphone­s, laptops and other small electrical devices.

Responding to growing demand, Apple last year announced it would start providing training and spare parts to certified independen­t repair stores fixing Mac computers, not just iPhones.

Right to repair bills have been introduced in several U.S. state legislatur­es, attracting bipartisan support, though as yet there is no nationwide measure in force.

Sweden has gone further than most of the EU, making repairs and spare parts subject to lower value-added tax.

The bloc’s ecological design directive — of which the right to repair requiremen­t is a part — will also revise existing energy labels that describe how much electricit­y washers and other household devices consume. The new seven-step scale from A to G will be complement­ed by a QR code that provides consumers with further informatio­n, such as how loud the devices are.

 ?? Photo: AP ?? Two girls run between makeshift shelters in the village of Siwa, Central African Republic, on Saturday 13 February. An estimated 240,000 people have been displaced in the country since mid-December, according to U.N. relief workers, when rebels calling themselves the Coalition of Patriots for Change launched attacks, causing a humanitari­an crisis in the already unstable nation.
Photo: AP Two girls run between makeshift shelters in the village of Siwa, Central African Republic, on Saturday 13 February. An estimated 240,000 people have been displaced in the country since mid-December, according to U.N. relief workers, when rebels calling themselves the Coalition of Patriots for Change launched attacks, causing a humanitari­an crisis in the already unstable nation.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta