People should be able to easily repair a broken product like a washing machine or computer rather than throwing it away and buying a new one.
So says Fine Gael MEP Deirdre Clune who was speaking in the European Parliament in Strasbourg. Tomorrow MEPs will vote on a range of proposals to give consumers incentives to repair products rather than replace them. They want rules to ensure products like computers, white goods and mobile phones last longer and that consumers have access to cheap spare parts and software updates
Their recommendations will feed into new European Commission plans to create ‘right to repair’ rules.
Here’s Deirdre Clune.
Out words: stop that
Dur: 00:17
Cuffe’s law to renovate leaky and damp homes
Progress but no deal yet - Andrews
Brexit speculation is ‘British kite-flying’
Irish Green leading energy efficiency law
Walsh urges policymakers’ transparency
Preventing violence against women EU-wide
Markey demands video games protections
All sides must give for “messy” NI deal
Brexit: ’We’re in the tunnel’ - Andrews
Pharma law to be reformed following shortages
EU working to ease medicine shortages - Clune
Kelly says Ireland’s energy security threatened
Automatic consent for wind farms - Kelly
MEPs vote for plastics export ban
EU creating integrity-based rules - Kelleher
Kelleher backs letterbox crackdown
Joint purchasing fertiliser could cut costs
EU can bring down food prices - Markey
O’Sullivan demands all Binder charges dropped
Binder case costing lives – O’Sullivan
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free