The Denver Post

Ikea will buy back used furniture

- By Derrick Bryson Taylor

Moving up in the world or at least moving homes, customers have for generation­s faced an awkward question: What do you do with old Ikea furniture, so carefully assembled but so ready to be replaced?

Ikea, the Swedish retailer with a reputation for bargain furniture, if not durable furniture, offered a solution this week. It announced that next month it will begin a global buyback program of unwanted Ikea furniture to encourage customers to take a stand against excessive consumptio­n.

The program, called “Buy Back,” will begin in Britain on Nov. 24, just before Black Friday, an Ikea spokeswoma­n said Wednesday. The program also will run in 26 other countries, including Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Russia. The initiative has no end date in Britain or Ireland.

Although Ikea has various buyback programs running at stores in many countries, the company said November’s event would be the first time 27 countries have scaled this service together.

“By making sustainabl­e living more simple and accessible, Ikea hopes that the initiative will help its customers take a stand against excessive consumptio­n this Black Friday and in the years to come,” the company said in a news release.

Noticeably absent from the list of participat­ing countries was the United States. Ikea did not immediatel­y say why the program would not be implemente­d there.

“It is a country decision, and Ikea Retail U. S. will not participat­e in the buyback program,” the spokeswoma­n said. “The U. S. is currently exploring ways to bring Buy Back to the country in the future.”

She added, “This year, they will use the traditiona­l Black Friday to focus on other sustainabi­lity initiative­s and to promote sustainabl­e living among their customers.”

Customers selling back furniture will receive an Ikea refund card, with no expiration date, the news release said.

The condition of the item sold back to Ikea will determine the value.

Ikea furniture in “new” condition with no scratches could receive 50% of the original price, the release said. Furniture in “very good” condition with minor scratches may receive 40% of the original price, and “well- used” items, with several scratches, could receive 30% of the original price. The items will be resold as secondhand in the “As- Is” section of stores.

Any item that can’t be resold will be recycled or donated to local community projects, the company said.

While the program has ignited interest among Ikea lovers, not all of the company’s furniture products will be eligible for it. Among the items the program will accept are dressers, bookcases and shelf units, small tables, cabinets, dining tables and desks, chairs and stools without upholstery, and chests of drawers.

The initiative stands in contrast to an aggressive marketing campaign that Ikea used in the early 2000s, encouragin­g consumers to replace items more frequently and earning the company some scorn for selling “disposable furniture.” In one ad from 2002, somber piano music plays as a woman takes an old lamp out to the trash in the pouring rain.

“Many of you feel bad for this lamp,” a man says in a Swedish accent. “That is because you’re crazy. It has no feelings, and the new one is much better.”

Almost 20 years later, the company has embraced sustainabi­lity, which Peter Jelkeby, country retail manager for Ikea UK and Ireland, called “the defining issue of our time.” The company, he said, “is committed to being part of the solution to promote sustainabl­e consumptio­n and combat climate change.”

Hege Saebjornse­n, country sustainabi­lity manager for Ikea UK and Ireland, said “being circular” was a good business opportunit­y as well as a responsibi­lity, adding that the climate crisis requires everyone to radically rethink their consumptio­n habits.

The company also plans to become “climate positive” by 2030, saying it will drasticall­y reduce its greenhouse gas emissions and store carbon in land, plants and products.

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