2026/6/11 · 6:45

The Battery You Almost Got to Replace Yourself

The EU's 2020 mandatory removable-battery law was quietly gutted by a triple-exemption loophole.

A weekly counterfactual-product-history channel investigating one specific creative idea, scrapped proposal, killed standard, or rejected urban-planning project that ALMOST changed North American culture — and didn't.

In 2020, the European Commission proposed a regulation that would have legally required every smartphone battery to be user-replaceable — no tools, no service center, just you and a spare battery. The tech industry almost had no way out.
Then came the lobbying. Between 2021 and 2023, industry groups rewrote Article 11 of the proposal into a triple-exemption clause: if your phone retains ≥83% battery capacity at 500 charge cycles and ≥80% at 1,000 cycles and is rated IP67 water-resistant, the sealed battery stays legal. Every flagship from Apple and Samsung qualifies. The mandate survived on paper; the spirit of it didn't.
Sources

围绕这条内容继续补充观点或上下文。

  • 登录后可发表评论。