Why it’s hard to repair a smartphone | DW | 12.04.2022
German smartphone maker Shift claims the amount of really broken displays its customers have actually returned would fit into an ordinary moving box. The company is based in Falkenberg in the German state of Hesse and in 2016 was the first smartphone manufacturer to introduce a deposit system for its Shiftphone models.
If you don’t want to use the firm’s phone anymore, you simply return it, pay its so-called salvage value, reclaim your deposit – usually around €22 ($23) – and that’s it.
The goal of Shift’s unusual business model is to reuse all working components of its phones. The number of those parts that cannot be rescued in one way or the other, like broken displays, is small, the firm told DW. This is possible because of the phones’ modular design, it said, meaning most components can be easily replaced.
Magic ‘modularization’
As the company markets its Shift6m model as “the most modular smartphone in the world” on its website, the Fraunhofer Institute for Reliability and Microintegration (IZM) tackles the subject of reliable and sustainable electronic devices from a scientific point of view.
Marina Proske and Karsten Schischke from the Berlin-based institute collaborated with Shift on developing its smartphones. What they called “modularization” was already standard in manufacturing desktop computers, but has yet to become more common in making smartphones and tablet PCs.
“Shift has shown that it’s possible to replace even very tiny components so that repairs needn’t be expensive, when you have the spare parts readily available,” Proske told DW. “Time is money, especially for commercial repair shops.”
Proske added that the way components were placed in a phone was similarly important because it wouldn’t be good if many other components would have to be taken out before the broken one could be replaced.
Nonrepairable gadgets to be banned
The Fraunhofer researchers have found that smartphone batteries and displays are by far the components most prone to break. Proske, therefore, demanded that even ordinary customers should be able to replace them and pointed to a major downside of commercial repairs. “Devices are usually returned to customers with all personal data completely erased.
This is why doing repairs yourself at home is much better,” she said. What could be a problem, though, is that the phone might then no longer be waterproof or dust-resistant, and wireless charging could also be impaired, she added.
IZM’s findings are contributing to legislation currently being prepared by the European Commission to improve so-called environmental and reliability engineering with regard to smartphones and tablet PCs sold in the EU. The rules are intended to define new product design requirements such as ensuring the supply of spare parts, battery durability and other standards to enhance the lifespan of electronic devices.
“The minimum goal intended is a commercial ban on nonrepairable gadgets,” said IZM researcher Karsten Schischke. He advocates for a “repair label” to give customers a product choice, similarly to the labeling already in place for energy consumption.
‘Greenwashing’ and other labeling problems
On a national level, France in April 2021 introduced a repair friendliness index for TV-sets, smartphones, laptop computers, washing machines and lawn mowers, with the manufacturers giving themselves points from 1 to 10. One year later, a survey by consumer advocacy group HOP found that half of the population was aware of the index and was using it for making purchase decisions.
“Manufacturers and sellers have been making valuable contributions to the index, for example by providing more repair manuals and better opportunities to buy spare parts easier,” HOP said in its report.
The group, however, also said that there were only few products that ranked in the lower index categories, which would indicate that most of them were either indeed easy to repair or that there were no strict criteria to observe. It lamented that high overall points could be achieved in spite of the fact that a device couldn’t be disassembled thus making repairs virtually impossible.
HOP cited Apple and Samsung smartphones as most striking examples. “Disassembling three gadgets [included in the index] proved to be next to impossible as parts were soldiered or glued together.”
As a result of its findings, HOP has called for more transparency, saying it wants to see the details of the index calculations published, including data on how long spare parts are really available and at what prices.
The German nonprofit Runder Tisch Reparatur, which translates into Repair Roundtable, is also demanding measures to improve the reparability of electronic devices. The organization brings together environment and consumer advocacy groups as well as professionals from handicraft businesses.
In a list of demands sent to the German government, they are pushing measures intended to lower repair costs such as reduced value-added tax (VAT) or a government-sponsored bonus for customers.
Repair centers in shopping malls
Jonathan Schött from the Repair Roundtable said that customers in Germany were still lacking “trustworthy repairers” because setting up shop in the business isn’t lucrative enough. Manufacturers’ monopolies on software and parts, he told DW, as well as limited access to the devices’ technical data would make running a repair shop difficult.
Greenpeace has set out to change this with a public campaign seeking to give repair shops more visibility in the public space. “We’re campaigning for one-tenth of all retail sales areas in Germany to be rented to businesses that offer alternatives to purchasing new goods,” said Viola Wohlgemuth, a Greenpeace expert on circular economy and resource protection. The businesses supported are mainly repair shops, but also pawn and exchange outlets, as well as stores offering used and recycled products.
“These sales spaces must be located right in the middle of commercial retail activities,” she told DW, “and should be supported by local authorities with tax breaks, subsidized rents and other financial incentives.”
Greenpeace has announced recently that it is still looking for local communities and municipalities to get its campaign off the ground in Germany.
This article was originally published in German.
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