The days of hunting through cables to find the right charger may be coming to an end.
The European Union has provisionally agreed new portable electronic devices must, by autumn 2024, use a USB Type-C charger.
BBC News has asked the UK government if it intends to pass similar legislation.
But under the current post-Brexit arrangements, the European Union ruling would apply to Northern Ireland, EU and UK officials have told BBC News.
According to a December 2021 parliamentary report, the “new requirements may also apply to devices sold in Northern Ireland under the terms of the Northern Ireland protocol in the Brexit agreement, potentially triggering divergence of product standards with the rest of the UK”.
The treaty works by keeping Northern Ireland inside the EU’s single market for goods, while mainland Britain is outside it.
A row between the UK and EU about how to reform the Northern Ireland protocol remains unresolved.
‘Stifles innovation’
Apple products such as iPhones and iPads will have to conform to the new regulation, as will, eventually laptop computers. Existing devices will be exempt.
The agreement will be brought before the European Parliament and the Council of Ministers after their summer recesses, where it can be formally approved and then published.
Apple told the BBC it had no new comment to make.
It argued against the proposal, when it was first introduced, in September 2021, with a representative telling BBC News:: “Strict regulation mandating just one type of connector stifles innovation rather than encouraging it, which in turn will harm consumers in Europe and around the world”.
The technology giant is the main manufacturer of smartphones using a custom charging port, as its iPhone series uses an Apple-made Lightning connector.
The new rule will cover a range of “small and medium-sized portable electronics”, according the EU, including:
- mobile phones
- tablets
- headphones and headsets
- handheld videogame consoles
- portable speakers
Any of these charged using a wired cable will have to have a USB Type-C port, regardless of who makes the devices.
Laptops will also have to abide by the ruling but manufacturers will have 40 months after it comes into effect to make changes.
The agreement also includes a plan to let customers choose whether or not they want a charging cable with their new electronics.
“This law is a part of a broader EU effort to make products in the EU more sustainable, to reduce electronic waste, and make consumers’ lives easier,” the EU said in its announcement.
It would save consumers “up to €250m [£213m] a year on unnecessary charger purchases” and cut 11,000 tonnes of waste per year, the EU added.
Gas prices dropping, with several stations in Cleveland area below $3 per gallon
Ohioans paid record prices for gas for a Thanksgiving holiday this year, but drivers could see a much different situation by the time Christmas arrives. Decreasing demand and the falling price of oil are causing a decline in gas prices in Ohio and across the nation,...
World Food Programme ups aid to Lebanon to $5.4bn over three years
The World Food Programme will give $5.4 billion in aid over the next three years to Lebanon, which is grappling with a devastating economic crisis that has plunged much of the population into poverty. The announcement came after a meeting between caretaker Prime...
Lebanon to adopt exchange rate closer to currency’s real value
Lebanon's Central Bank will adopt an exchange rate for dollar withdrawals that is closer to the crashing currency's real market value, central bank governor Riad Salemeh said in a televised interview on Monday. “We are in the process of unifying the exchange rates”,...
Submit your event
We will be happy to share your events. Please email us the details and pictures at publish@profilenewsohio.com
Address
P.O. Box: 311001 Independance, Ohio, 44131
Call Us
+1 (216) 269 3272
Email Us
Publish@profilenewsohio.com