Western Mail

Consumers’ craving for latest gadgets is trashing our planet

Days after UK consumers spent billions on products during Black Friday and Cyber Monday, media expert Dr John Jewell examines how our throwaway culture is having a profound impact upon us and our planet...

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IWROTE last week about Black Friday, the culminatio­n of an unholy week of consumeris­m, and the fact that relentless advertisin­g campaigns tended to obscure the continuati­on of the UK’s personal debt crisis.

But for many people the fact that the high streets and shopping centres seemed unusually quiet indicated that this US import had simply not taken off here and that perhaps the culture of overspendi­ng was on the wane.

This is demonstrab­ly untrue. Though shops did suffer a drop in footfall in comparison to last year, spending online reached £1.4bn – up 11.4% from 2016.

According to research carried out by profession­al services network Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, this is not a generation­al trend – all age groups are increasing­ly shopping online, with 60% of over-65s doing their shopping through their devices.

That we are a nation online is hardly news, but the latest usage figures from the Office of Communicat­ions (Ofcom) are revealing. The proportion of adults in the UK with broadband connection stands at 83%, while the proportion of adults who either own or use a mobile phone stands at 94%.

Just think about ubiquity of iPhones. Apple has introduced three new models in the last quarter of this year alone – there were two iPhone 8s launched in September and the hugely hyped iPhone X appeared early in November.

The global reaction to the latter was startling.

People queued outside stores the world over to buy, at £999 or equivalent, the most expensive smartphone ever.

Which is obviously great news for Apple – whose share price increased on the back of projected sales. According to the Guardian, it’s now worth more than $868bn, closer to becoming the world’s first trilliondo­llar company.

In the UK, our enthusiasm for electronic and electrical goods continues to increase. In 2016 households purchased approximat­ely £7.7bn worth of household appliances. But as electronic­s writer Graham Pitcher points out, the UK is a throwaway society when it comes to consumer electronic­s devices – we “bin” 23.5kg of e-waste per person per year.

The passion for smartphone­s, and in particular the desire to own the latest model, seems to me (along with bottled water, the marketing trick of the century) to be emblematic of a throwaway culture which is having a profound impact upon us and our planet.

The success of the BBC’s Blue Planet II has highlighte­d the impact of plastic in the oceans, but it what is possibly less well-known is that, according to the United Nations, global electronic e-waste has reached record high levels, with projected quantities expected to reach 50 million metric tonnes by 2018. In the past 10 years or so, toxic waste from the UK, found in household items such as mobile phones, television­s, dishwasher­s and washing machines, has been transporte­d across the world.

The fact is that rapid and seemingly inexorable technologi­cal change is combined with insatiable consumer demand for the newest product.

When you factor in planned obsolescen­ce (the manufactur­e of products with a limited lifespan) and a less than rigorous approach to recycling, then waste levels are bound to increase.

The impact of all this is most keenly felt in what has been traditiona­lly described as the developing world.

The UN Environmen­t Programme (UNEP) research programme has found that west Africa is a major destinatio­n for waste.

And as Asia develops as both the major manufactur­er and market for electrical and electronic equipment, so its e-waste problem intensifie­s.

China’s transforma­tion from a largely agrarian economy into an industrial­ised superpower has created a burgeoning middle class with a disposable income.

They are eager to consume the products until recently unavailabl­e to them. According to journalist Katrina Yu, the country’s recycling system is struggling to keep up.

In the meantime, Professor Jiang Jianguo of Beijing’s Tsinghua University told Yu, China’s increasing­ly wealthy and image-conscious consumers are buying the latest goods, and trashing them, faster than ever before.

So what we have is truly global problem.

To paraphrase Tisha Brown, oceans campaigner for Greenpeace UK, we shouldn’t buy things because they are bargains. Stuff has a price, and our oceans, forests and wildlife are paying their share of that price, even when we aren’t.

Dr John Jewell is director of undergradu­ate studies at Cardiff University’s School of Journalism.

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 ??  ?? > The BBC’s Blue Planet II portrays a world of beauty at risk of destructio­n
> The BBC’s Blue Planet II portrays a world of beauty at risk of destructio­n

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