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Drivers and Barriers for “Circular” Consumer Electronics in the European Union

Dalhammar, Carl LU ; Richter, Jessika Luth LU and Fernandez-Montenegro von Schack, Philipp Salvador LU (2024) Electronics Goes Green 2024 p.1-1
Abstract
The European Union (EU) and the EU member states have adopted a number of policies that can support circular economy developments in the electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) sector, and additional policies have been proposed. The policies include the new Ecodesign Regulation and a new Battery Regulation, and forthcoming rules related to durability and repairability of mobile phones and tablets. This paper, based on an interview study and analysis of the policies, examines what kind of changes the new policies may have on design of EE, and whether practitioners believe the policies will change consumer behavior. Some policies – most notably the Ecodesign Directive, the new Ecodesign Regulation, Energy Labeling, and the Battery... (More)
The European Union (EU) and the EU member states have adopted a number of policies that can support circular economy developments in the electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) sector, and additional policies have been proposed. The policies include the new Ecodesign Regulation and a new Battery Regulation, and forthcoming rules related to durability and repairability of mobile phones and tablets. This paper, based on an interview study and analysis of the policies, examines what kind of changes the new policies may have on design of EE, and whether practitioners believe the policies will change consumer behavior. Some policies – most notably the Ecodesign Directive, the new Ecodesign Regulation, Energy Labeling, and the Battery Regulation – are expected to have an impact on future design of EEE. Digital Product Passports (DPPs) are considered to have a high potential to support newdevelopments. Mandating that product warranties are shown clearly at the time of purchase also has potential to change manufacturers’ product offerings. There were diverging views on how much behavioral changes we can expect from consumers. Interviewed practitioners expect that consumers are likely to react to information about durability/lifetime for expensive products but are not likely to respond to repairability information for cheaper products. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Electronics Goes Green 2024+ Conference Proceedings
pages
10 pages
publisher
IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
conference name
Electronics Goes Green 2024
conference location
Berlin, Germany
conference dates
2024-06-18 - 2024-06-20
DOI
10.23919/EGG62010.2024.10631178.
project
Mapping out and overcoming barriers for circular products: the policy context for corporations that want to “go circular”
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
06922676-d5b0-40b7-8953-9e341ec4bf5f
date added to LUP
2024-09-04 13:37:29
date last changed
2024-09-05 09:10:09
@inproceedings{06922676-d5b0-40b7-8953-9e341ec4bf5f,
  abstract     = {{The European Union (EU) and the EU member states have adopted a number of policies that can support circular economy developments in the electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) sector, and additional policies have been proposed. The policies include the new Ecodesign Regulation and a new Battery Regulation, and forthcoming rules related to durability and repairability of mobile phones and tablets. This paper, based on an interview study and analysis of the policies, examines what kind of changes the new policies may have on design of EE, and whether practitioners believe the policies will change consumer behavior. Some policies – most notably the Ecodesign Directive, the new Ecodesign Regulation, Energy Labeling, and the Battery Regulation – are expected to have an impact on future design of EEE. Digital Product Passports (DPPs) are considered to have a high potential to support newdevelopments. Mandating that product warranties are shown clearly at the time of purchase also has potential to change manufacturers’ product offerings. There were diverging views on how much behavioral changes we can expect from consumers. Interviewed practitioners expect that consumers are likely to react to information about durability/lifetime for expensive products but are not likely to respond to repairability information for cheaper products.}},
  author       = {{Dalhammar, Carl and Richter, Jessika Luth and Fernandez-Montenegro von Schack, Philipp Salvador}},
  booktitle    = {{Electronics Goes Green 2024+ Conference Proceedings}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{1--1}},
  publisher    = {{IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.}},
  title        = {{Drivers and Barriers for “Circular” Consumer Electronics in the European Union}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/194515498/Dalhammar_et_al_2024_EGG_preprint.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.23919/EGG62010.2024.10631178.}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}