Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Europeans fight for ‘right to repair’

Rising consumer prices, environmen­tal footprint give momentum to movement

- JAMES BROOKS Associated Press writers Jan Olsen in Copenhagen, Frank Jordans in Berlin and Marcy Gordon in Washington contribute­d to this report.

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — At a table scattered with tools and wires, volunteer repairers sit across from the owners of an assortment of inoperable electronic­s. The volunteers at a free “repair cafe” in Copenhagen disassembl­e and diagnose gadgets while the customers watch, each doing their part for the environmen­t — one broken blender, radio or laptop at a time.

In Denmark, workshops are held on a regular basis so that nonprofess­ionals with a bug for fixing things can share equipment and technical know-how with each other as well as the less handy. The nonprofit Repair Cafe Denmark stages up to 15 weekly events in public libraries and community centers across the Scandinavi­an country.

“I didn’t want to replace it with a new one because it was such a tiny little problem,” said Ann Lisbeth Dam, who recently brought a digital radio her daughter gave her four years ago into a Copenhagen community center where restorers also worked on a nonfunctio­ning music speaker and a digital photo frame. In exchange, people were asked to chip in money to cover the cost of coffee.

The Danish events represent activism in its most direct, local form, but they also are part of an internatio­nal movement calling for the “right to repair.” The movement, which has branches elsewhere in Europe and in the United States, is a response to the expense and environmen­tal cost of personal electronic­s and appliances becoming obsolete within a few years because manufactur­ers make them expensive or difficult to fix.

“We have to take care of the planet. We can’t afford to live like we used to live, so we have to make a movement about not throwing things out when they’re still working,” Repair Cafe Denmark chairman Stig Bomholt said.

Chloe Mikolajcza­k, a campaigner for Right to Repair Europe, an advocacy network of 80 organizati­ons across 17 European countries, says consumers face a number of built-in obstacles when they are deciding whether to fix or throw away a device.

“There’s all these barriers at the design stage,” she said. “You know, whether it’s glue in the product that makes it very difficult to take out a part and replace it, whether it’s the use of proprietar­y tools, meaning you need to have specific tools that are linked to the manufactur­er to open a product, or whether it’s the fact that spare parts or repair informatio­n are very difficult to access.”

According to the United Nations, Europe produced more electronic waste per capita — 35 pounds per person compared to Africa’s 5.5 pounds per person — than any other continent last year. More than half of the of the e-waste produced in the 27-nation European Union consists of large household appliances. Items that aren’t recycled typically end up in landfills or are shipped to developing countries.

Earlier this year, the EU introduced new rules requiring manufactur­ers to ensure spare parts are available for refrigerat­ors, washers, hairdryers and TVs for up to 10 years. New appliances also will have to come with repair manuals and be made in such a way that they can be dismantled using convention­al tools.

Jessika Luth Richter, an environmen­tal researcher at Lund University and a board member for a group that runs a bi-weekly repair cafe in the Swedish city of Malmo, said the rules don’t go far enough because in some cases only profession­al repair companies will be allowed to obtain parts to make sure they are installed correctly.

“A lot of the tools and manuals are only made available to profession­als, and we’re not profession­als. That means that we don’t get access to some of this,” Richter said.

Activists want the EU to implement a so-called “repairabil­ity index” to give consumers clearer informatio­n on how easy products are to fix. France introduced a law at the beginning of the year that requires sellers to list fix-it scores based on a set of criteria that includes the availabili­ty of spare parts and ease of disassembl­y.

“If they’re buying a product which has a very, very poor grade, then they know that they shouldn’t expect it to be repairable,” explained Mikolajcza­k of Right to Repair Europe.

The Biden administra­tion has indicated it’s in favor of “right to repair” policies. The Federal Trade Commission is moving toward writing new rules that would make it easier for Americans to fix their broken cellphones, computers, video game consoles and tractors themselves or at independen­t repair shops.

Supporters see such measures as complement­ing both large-scale efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, such as phasing out the use of coal, and consumer-oriented technology like electric cars. Manufactur­ers, though, argue that repair restrictio­ns are needed to safeguard intellectu­al property, to protect consumers from possible injuries and to prevent cybersecur­ity risks.

Apple has long been a target for right-to-repair advocates because of its practice of locking down its software so that parts are encoded to a specific device. The company recently announced it would let some iPhone users fix their own phones. The shift is considered a sharp turnaround for a company that has long prohibited anyone but company-approved technician­s from fiddling with its proprietar­y parts and software.

Repair cafe volunteers know they won’t rid Europe of all e-waste but hope to reduce the amount generating by spreading a repair-it-yourself ethos.

“I actually have the courage to open it myself next time to check if I am able to do anything about it,” said Viktor Herget, who brought a broken music speaker to a Copenhagen repair cafe.

 ?? (AP/James Brooks) ?? A volunteer repairs a circuit board Nov. 14 at a bi-weekly repair cafe event in Malmo, Sweden.
(AP/James Brooks) A volunteer repairs a circuit board Nov. 14 at a bi-weekly repair cafe event in Malmo, Sweden.
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 ?? ?? Workshops like this one give nonprofess­ionals one-on-one time with experts.
Workshops like this one give nonprofess­ionals one-on-one time with experts.
 ?? ?? Volunteers (left photo) get hands-on experience at bi-weekly tech workshops held throughout Denmark. (Above photo) A sign reads, “Welcome to Repair Cafe,” on the door of Garaget public library.
Volunteers (left photo) get hands-on experience at bi-weekly tech workshops held throughout Denmark. (Above photo) A sign reads, “Welcome to Repair Cafe,” on the door of Garaget public library.

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