Smartphone makers to face new restrictions in Europe

Smartphone manufacturers supplying the EU will face stringent requirements to provide spare parts and ensure longer battery life, according to draft proposals published by Brussels, Report informs referring to the Financial Times.

The European Commission said that at least 15 different component parts should be made available for at least five years from the date of a smartphone’s introduction to the market and that batteries should survive at least 500 full charges without deteriorating to below 83 percent of their capacity.

Phones would also have to display an energy efficiency label, similar to those used for washing machines and dishwashers, which will show battery endurance and other characteristics such as resistance to drops.

The scheme is Brussels’ latest directive targeting electronics manufacturers after introducing in June a requirement to use a standardized charger by 2024, despite years of industry opposition, in particular from Apple.

Extending the life cycle of all the smartphones sold in the EU by five years would save emissions equivalent to around 10 million tons of Co2 - roughly the same as taking 5 million cars off the road, according to a study by the European Environmental Bureau, a non-governmental organization.

The draft regulations, which also cover tablets and standard mobile phones, suggest that if hardware is made more repairable and recyclable it would cut the energy consumption involved in its production and use by a third.

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