Prices for the new iPhone 16 that debuted in September start at $799, while the iPhone 16 Pro Max starts at $1,199, but cost doesn’t seem to discourage smartphone consumers from upgrading them frequently.
More than 1 in 10 Americans (11.89%) get a new phone once a year, and another 4.2% do so every six months, according to a Slashgear poll. Most (55.4%) upgrade every two to three years, but even that seemed excessive to participants in two recent Climate Week panels in New York about extending the lifespan of electronic devices.
“A number of people I talk to upgrade their phone because they think that they need the new camera, and it’s like, let’s all be real: the camera on the iPhone 10 is absolutely fine,” Corinne Iozzio, editor in chief of climate-action publication one5c, said at a panel in New York on September 24, referring the iPhone released in 2017. “I guess your crummy Instagram photo is a little bit better now, but nobody noticed.”
One way to increase the lifespan of devices, and thus help stem the growing problem of electronic waste, Iozzio and others argue, is to enable consumers and independent repair shops to fix devices when they break.
Right-to-repair laws, like one that took effect in the state of New York in 2023, require electronics manufacturers to make original parts and instructions for their devices available to consumers and independent repair shops.
The laws have been championed by electronic device resellers, like Back Market, which participated in this year’s Climate Week.
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