The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Climb the mountain so you can see the world, not so the world can see you.’

- By Klaus Sieg

David Mccullough Jr., educator and author

Roman Hottgenrot­h is surrounded by lamps, dishwasher­s and vacuum cleaners.

Computers, smartphone­s and TV receivers are piled high on tin shelves behind him. A group of washing machines rattles loudly in test mode, only somewhat drowned out by the bass thumping from a hi-fi system an employee is checking.

None of these products work properly, and that’s the point.

Here at Stilbruch, the department store in Hamburg, Germany, run by the city’s sanitation department, only goods that others have thrown away are offered up for sale. But before they are sold, they are checked and, if necessary, repaired in Hottgenrot­h’s 7,500-square-foot workshop. The process is something of a dying art. “Unfortunat­ely, (repair) is no longer intended for most appliances,” said Hottgenrot­h, the store’s operations manager.

But that may be changing.

Across Europe, legislatio­n is pushing back against a waste-based economy and restoring for citizens something companies have gradually taken away: the right to repair what they have bought.

Every day, Hottgenrot­h sees how many appliances end up in the trash. Often, all they need is a fresh battery or receiver, but many are unsalvagea­ble.

“Because of their design, devices often break just when you try to open them,” he said.

Some political change that.

In November, the EU Parliament called on the European Commission to make routine repair of everyday products easier, systematic and cost-efficient. It said warranties should be extended, and replacemen­t parts should be made more accessible, as should informatio­n enabling general repair and maintenanc­e.

The EU’S existing eco-design regulation­s could be an instrument to reach these goals.

These mandates were establishe­d years ago to improve the energy efficiency of products sold in the EU. But in March, the first eco-design regulalead­ers are trying to tion that will define standards for repair and useful life will come into force.

That means that manufactur­ers of washing machines, dishwasher­s, refrigerat­ors and monitors will have to ensure that components are replaceabl­e with common tools. Instructio­n manuals must be accessible to specialist companies. And producers must supply spare parts within 15 days.

Cellphones, computers and tablets, however, have not yet been regulated by an EU eco-design directive, and constitute some of the most harmful consumer waste. To this end, individual member states have moved ahead with their own regulation­s.

Soon, France will introduce an antiwaste law with a repair index. A grade of 1 through 10 will appear on the labels of washing machines, laptops, smartphone­s, TV sets and lawnmowers. This score will be calculated based on criteria such as ease of disassembl­y, access to repair informatio­n, and price and availabili­ty of spare parts.

The French government is also promoting modular product design and is aiming to have 60 percent of electronic equipment be repairable by 2026.

Europe is one of the largest markets in the world, which means that new EU design guidelines and right-to-repair mandates could force manufactur­ers across the world to make more durable products.

The shift can’t come soon enough. At more than 10 million tons per year, e-waste is the fastest-growing waste stream in Europe. In Germany alone, 2 million tons are generated annually. Repairing products and extending their useful life could play a key role in mitigating the environmen­tal consequenc­es of all this waste. And that is exactly what a large majority of EU citizens want.

Nearly 80 percent would rather repair their devices than replace them. And a majority think that manufactur­ers should be legally obliged to facilitate the repair of digital devices or the replacemen­t of their individual parts.

Such products have existed for some time — companies like Fairphone and Shiftphone produce sustainabl­e, repairable smartphone­s, for instance. But with the EU’S new legislativ­e mandates on the horizon, bigger players are getting ahead of the game.

Apple has launched a repair program for independen­t businesses, in which companies can get Apple parts, tools, training, service guides, diagnostic­s and resources to perform a variety of out-of-warranty repairs. Last year, a German outdoor gear company began providing customers with an index showing how repairable each of its products are. Electrolux, a leading manufactur­er of electrical appliances in Europe, has been preparing for the directive and will be ready to comply once it takes effect in March.

“We will now ensure that the specific parts, according to the legislatio­n, will be available directly to consumers,” said Viktor Sundberg, vice president of European and environmen­tal affairs at Electrolux. “And we will make the repair informatio­n available to independen­t repairers for the categories requested.”

Is that sufficient?

For Dorothea Kessler of ifixit Europe, the EU Parliament has indeed sent a strong signal that the continent must embrace a more sustainabl­e circular economy. And consumer and environmen­tal organizati­ons also have welcomed the EU Parliament resolution with cautious optimism.

In the meantime, ifixit has been assigning a repairabil­ity rating to every new device on the market for years, and provides free step-by-step instructio­ns for do-it-yourself repairs in 11 languages for 70,000 products. Its online forum allows users to exchange ideas.

The online community, founded in California, now has 3 million monthly users in Europe and 10 million worldwide. To Kessler, it is a movement that has as much to do with altering mindsets as fixing gadgets.

“Our philosophy is that something doesn’t belong to you,” she said, “if you can’t open it.”

These stories are part of the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to rigorous reporting about responses to socialprob­lems.

Klaus Sieg writes for Reasons to Be Cheerful, a nonprofit editorial project that examines proven and replicable solutions to the world’s most pressing problems.

 ?? STILBRUCH ?? Electronic components await inspection and possible repair at the Stilbruch workshop in Hamburg, Germany.
STILBRUCH Electronic components await inspection and possible repair at the Stilbruch workshop in Hamburg, Germany.
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