Online parts retailer releases survey on consumer e-waste negligence, and launches appliance repair initiative

A survey of 5,000 UK householders has found that the majority of Brits don’t attempt to fix perfectly repairable appliances – creating thousands of tonnes of unnecessary waste every year. Of the 1.4 million tonnes of e-waste binned in the UK every year, more than 70% is unaccounted for.

The research, undertaken by online spare parts retailer eSpares, appears to confirm that consumers prefer to simply throw away their broken appliances, replacing them with new models and often ignoring the environmental implications. Over 55s were highlighted as the worst culprits, being the most likely age group to dispose of broken appliances. High income families were also identified as a key contributor to e-waste, with less than 1 in 5 likely to attempt a fix.

“With the headlines dominated by ocean plastics, e-waste has seemingly slipped under the radar,” commented Ad Casey, head of brand at eSpares. However, with every UK resident creating almost 15kg of e-waste per annum (a collective national weight 100 times heavier than the Eiffel Tower) it’s a terrifying issue that we can’t continue to ignore.”

While the research has sent alarm bells ringing, eSpares believes that there is a simple and effective solution. In fact, estimations show that by repairing just 10% of fixable appliances, it would be possible to prevent almost 100,000 tonnes of e-waste from being unnecessarily thrown away each year.

Casey continued: “Curbing e-waste is easier than you may think. Fixing appliances is quick, cheap and the more logical solution than relying on landfill.”

To inspire a national change towards disposing of e-waste, eSpares has launched #FixFirst – an initiative that provides householders with comprehensive information on how to fix appliances and help protect the environment. The company’s Advice Centre features more than 500 ‘how to’ videos, 700 fault fix articles and 9,000 appliance manuals, all of which help consumers to fix – not throw away.

For more information about the #FixFirst campaign, visit https://espares.co.uk/fixfirst.