Some white goods and electronics in France are set to be labelled with a new logo to show their durability, reparability, and reliability, in a bid to encourage consumers to buy longer-lasting products.
This law has been in place since January 2021 for five product categories: smartphones, laptops, televisions, lawnmowers, and front-opening washing machines (those with a ‘window’ in the front).
At the end of 2022, it was extended to four other categories: top-opening washing machines, dishwashers, hoovers and high-pressure cleaners.
This new index has extra criteria, with the main change requiring an assessment of the product’s reliability (its resistance to stress and wear), and a commercial guarantee.
The new score is calculated based on a range of criteria, , including:
The reparability of equipment (the accessibility of technical documentation, ease of dismantling, and the availability and price of spare parts)
The reliability of the equipment (resistance to stress and wear, ease of maintenance and servicing, and the existence of a commercial guarantee and a quality process).
‘Too few products’ included in the index
However, the HOP association has said that the new rules do not go far enough, and “still apply to too few productsâ€.
It has particularly criticised “the exclusion of smartphones from this scheme, following [on the issue]â€.
The EU felt that the new French index clashes with existing European regulation providing for a similar scheme for smartphones, reports consumer association .
This regulation already states that from June 2025, smartphones sold in the EU “will have to display information on their energy efficiency, longevity, protection against dust and water and resistance to accidental dropsâ€.
The HOP association said that this regulation was “less restrictive†than the new French index, and would be less effective in reducing smartphone waste.