Soon the end of incompatible chargers cluttering up drawers?

The European Commission proposed, Thursday, September 23, a regulation to impose a universal charger for mobile phones and other electronic devices, in the name of consumer rights and the environment.

A project that arouses the opposition of the American giant Apple.

The regulations aim to harmonize the charging ports for smartphones, tablets, cameras, headphones, speakers and portable game consoles and could threaten the connection cables of the Californian group's iPhones. 

The project has yet to be approved by MEPs and EU member states. 

"A victory for consumers and the environment (...) Europeans are fed up with incompatible chargers piling up in their drawers," said European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, quoted in a statement.

"We have given the industry plenty of time to find solutions. Now, the time has come to legislate," she insisted.

"It is time to put an end to this sea serpent," added Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton to the press, hoping for the text to come into force within "a few semesters".

EU wants to impose USB-C port

This project was launched in 2009 by the Commission and was the subject of a European Parliament resolution in January 2020, but it has so far met with strong reluctance from the industry, although the number of existing types of chargers have been greatly reduced over the years. 

From around thirty in 2009, they have grown to three: the Micro USB connector which has long equipped the majority of telephones, USB-C, a more recent connection, and the Lightning used by Apple.

The EU now wants to impose the USB-C port on all electronic devices, which would allow any charger to be used interchangeably, while the harmonization of fast charging technologies will ensure the same speed of charging - avoiding that it is clamped when used with a device of a different brand.

Arm wrestling with Apple

Apple, which claims that its Lightning technology equips more than a billion devices worldwide, immediately reiterated its opposition.

"This regulation would stifle rather than encourage innovation and harm consumers in Europe and around the world," the group told AFP.

The firm at the apple, which estimated last year that such legislation would generate "an unprecedented volume of electronic waste" by making obsolete some of the chargers in circulation, is alarmed by the 24-month transition proposed by Brussels, deemed hasty, and the upheaval of its current recycling channels.

The Commission retorts that European consumers, who spend around 2.4 billion euros per year on purchases of chargers alone, could save at least 250 million euros annually, and that waste from unused chargers, valued at 11 000 tonnes per year, could be reduced by almost 1000 tonnes.

Brussels ensures that companies' capacity for innovation is preserved - especially in wireless charging techniques, which are precisely excluded from the draft directive because they are still considered to be largely developing in a market that is currently "not very fragmented".

The ANEC association, which defends the rights of consumers on issues related to technological standards, welcomed the draft directive, while regretting that wireless charging systems, in full swing, are not concerned.

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