New EU Law Forces All Cellphone Chargers to Share Common Standard
The new law will make it mandatory for all cellphones to be able to be charged through a single, universal standard.
We've all been there. You're over at a friend's house, and your cellphone is running on fumes. "Hey man, can I borrow your charger?" you ask. "Oh, sorry," he replies, "I only have an iPhone 5 charger..." In Europe, at least, this scenario may soon be a thing of the past, as a new law will require all cellphones to use a single, universal standard for their chargers.
Provided the Council of Ministers green lights the regulation, the law will come into effect in 2017... so phone makers do have a few years to get their act in gear. EU countries will have until 2016 to put it into their local laws. The European Parliament session [http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/news-room/content/20140307IPR38122/html/MEPs-push-for-common-charger-for-all-mobile-phones] that drafted the law found that a common charger would "reduce waste, costs and hassle for users."
As for what that standard may be, back in 2009 the European commission received industry backing [http://www.engadget.com/2009/06/29/nokia-apple-rim-and-others-agree-on-micro-usb-phone-charger-st/] from the likes of Nokia, Apple and RIM for its phone charger standard that relies on a micro-USB socket. Micro-USB is already used for many Android smartphones, and other electronic devices such as cameras.
This should come as pretty welcome move for anyone who's ever bought a new cellphone and been left with a useless charger. Here's hoping similar laws get adopted around the world.
Source: Engadget [http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/news-room/content/20140307IPR38122/html/MEPs-push-for-common-charger-for-all-mobile-phones]
Permalink
The new law will make it mandatory for all cellphones to be able to be charged through a single, universal standard.
We've all been there. You're over at a friend's house, and your cellphone is running on fumes. "Hey man, can I borrow your charger?" you ask. "Oh, sorry," he replies, "I only have an iPhone 5 charger..." In Europe, at least, this scenario may soon be a thing of the past, as a new law will require all cellphones to use a single, universal standard for their chargers.
Provided the Council of Ministers green lights the regulation, the law will come into effect in 2017... so phone makers do have a few years to get their act in gear. EU countries will have until 2016 to put it into their local laws. The European Parliament session [http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/news-room/content/20140307IPR38122/html/MEPs-push-for-common-charger-for-all-mobile-phones] that drafted the law found that a common charger would "reduce waste, costs and hassle for users."
As for what that standard may be, back in 2009 the European commission received industry backing [http://www.engadget.com/2009/06/29/nokia-apple-rim-and-others-agree-on-micro-usb-phone-charger-st/] from the likes of Nokia, Apple and RIM for its phone charger standard that relies on a micro-USB socket. Micro-USB is already used for many Android smartphones, and other electronic devices such as cameras.
This should come as pretty welcome move for anyone who's ever bought a new cellphone and been left with a useless charger. Here's hoping similar laws get adopted around the world.
Source: Engadget [http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/news-room/content/20140307IPR38122/html/MEPs-push-for-common-charger-for-all-mobile-phones]
Permalink