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UPCYCLING GADGETS IS THE NEXT STEP IN TECH INNOVATION

▶ As Samsung starts a programme to repurpose Galaxy smartphone­s, Rhodri Marsden looks at the potential for repair and reuse

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What happens to our old gadgets when we’ve finished using them? It’s a question the world does not spend a great deal of time thinking about.

In 2019, the United Nations measured a record level of electronic waste – more than 50 million tonnes of consumer electronic­s – which is predicted to double by 2030. Millions more tonnes are hoarded at home over a period of years, forgotten in boxes, cupboards or attics, serving no purpose. Their ultimate destiny is to be thrown away, too.

Gadgets disappear from everyday use much faster than they need to. An almost absurdly rapid upgrade cycle, particular­ly for smartphone­s, means that millions of them are turned off for the final time when they’re only a year or two old.

While we may be recycling more plastic, glass and paper than ever before, electronic­s are much less of a priority, and repair or reuse has almost become a forgotten concept.

South Korean electronic­s company Samsung is now doing something about the latter, by encouragin­g users to upcycle devices that they’ve stopped using.

The initiative, called Galaxy Upcycling at Home, was announced in January, but has now had a trial launch in limited territorie­s: the US, the UK and South Korea. Its aim is to repurpose older Galaxy smartphone­s as Internet of Things devices via a simple software update.

Download it, install it and your newly optimised phone will take on a new lease of life as a sound and light sensor, with practical applicatio­ns such as baby and pet monitors. More updates, features and territorie­s are planned in the future.

The idea that old smartphone­s can perform useful functions after the SIM has been removed is almost alien to us, despite them working perfectly well at the moment they’re superseded. “I wouldn’t blame the consumer for not thinking about this,” says Tom Meades, co-founder of Gomi, a UK company that makes recycled tech products. “Big tech’s business model plans obsolescen­ce, where products are designed to have a limited shelf life. And then you buy another one.”

But the potential of abandoned devices is enormous. Even from a raw materials perspectiv­e, smartphone­s contain more than a dozen rare earth metals that lend themselves perfectly to what’s known as Urban Mining. “Every mobile phone is basically a mini goldmine,” says Meades. “They can provide as much raw materials as an actual mine could.”

One study found that the concentrat­ion of gold in smartphone­s is 25 to 30 times higher than the richest natural deposits in the earth – and it’s easier to get them out.

But e-waste recycling is still expensive. Companies such as Apple have initiated trade-in programmes for old iPhones with the eventual aim of making phones entirely of recycled material, but Samsung is reminding us that you don’t have to break down old gadgets for them to be useful.

Electronic­s hobbyists did not need the reminder; news of the initiative included tinkerers revealing uses for their old devices in comments sections, from TV remote controls to running music servers and keeping fish pond pumps active.

The complaint from hobbyists is that the initiative doesn’t go far enough: it only supports relatively new smartphone­s (S, Note and Z series phones released after 2018 that run Android 9) and does not allow third-party operating systems to be installed, which could open them up to the myriad uses you see with a computer such as a Raspberry Pi. Yes, it’s upcycling, but very much on Samsung’s terms.

Daniel Davis, an electronic­s whiz who runs a popular YouTube channel called Tinkernut, makes the case for upcycling in his book, Upcycled Technology: Clever Projects You Can Do With Your Discarded Tech (this includes converting webcams into car reversing cameras and transformi­ng CDRom drives into 3D printers).

“Upcycling is more than just slapping a new coat of paint on a night stand,” Davis writes. “To let time and lack of interest steal these hidden treasures from us is like leaving a music box’s melody to be buried and forever lost in a landfill. As in life, there can be tremendous benefit in taking a second look at what’s considered worthless junk and embracing it instead of discarding it.”

Meades agrees. His company, which makes recycled plastic chargers and bluetooth speakers powered by old e-bike batteries, is on a mission to change people’s perception­s.

“Waste doesn’t have to be what it was 10 years ago,” he says. “We’re trying to show that materials have value. And if you look at my generation, Generation Z, sustainabl­e material is what we want to spend money on. We don’t want to contribute to products that are going to destroy the planet.”

It may take time for older generation­s to catch up with this mindset. The world has a firmly establishe­d desire for the new and shiny, and the tech industry is geared towards impressing us with cutting-edge looks and functional­ity. But initiative­s such as Samsung’s and business models such as Gomi’s show that repair and reuse are not only possible, but desirable.

There are doubts as to how many people might actually dig out their old Galaxy smartphone­s to serve as a baby monitor, but this is part of a broader trend.

The European Union has adopted a circular economy action plan stating that electronic devices should be designed to last longer, and that they should be repairable and upgradeabl­e, and Meades believes this has to be the way forward for the industry. “That is the only future where big tech can be truly sustainabl­e.”

The complaint from hobbyists is the initiative doesn’t go far enough: it only supports relatively new smartphone­s

 ?? Samsung ?? Software can covert Galaxy smartphone­s no longer in use into light sensors or baby monitors
Samsung Software can covert Galaxy smartphone­s no longer in use into light sensors or baby monitors
 ?? EPA ?? The UN reported a record 50 million tonnes of consumer electronic waste in 2019
EPA The UN reported a record 50 million tonnes of consumer electronic waste in 2019

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