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The Agenda With Steve Paikin: On The Road 2010: London, Brockville, Timmins > Season I > Waterloo > The Move to Repairability
The Move to RepairabilityFrom $1Table of contentsNo headers
Group Participants: Michael Day, Heike Mertins, Andrew Bauer Should we be focusing more on repairing the things that we buy, or is repairing things a thing of the past given our present lifestyle and economy? Why aren't we repairing? - 'designed obsolescence' - easy for the manufacturer and the user/buyer. - How much energy does it take to produce an energy-efficient product? - cost/timeliness/convenience and trust of repair - some items might be just plain 'unrepairable' / or not user-serviceable Consumer - Manufacturer - Government Consumer responsibility: - take some time to repair something simple. -attitudes and skills - Educated to ask the right information - demand disclosure - ask 'can this be fixed?' Manufacturer: - re-introduce / re-emphasize refurbishment programs - design for longevity and repair - upgradeability - make maintenance information availabe (could make use of internet, etc.) Government: - re-introduce technical skills into education, - legislate lifecycle responsibility - mandate service information and reliability information be included when you buy a product - better product information - tax incentive for consumers to repair products rather than replace - carbon / green tax credits / incentives to manufacturers Vendor: - better educate consumers (and themselves) - offer repair services - facilitate service
Areas where innovation could be used: - refurbishment programs - auto industry - part exchange, discount refurbished parts - motors / compressors, industrial/agricultural, tools/machinery - design for longevity/repair - educate consumers - technically knowlegeable people, frugal/cheap people, environmentally concious people, 'freecycle' - like craig's list/kigigi but free - service information - 'Staber' washing machines
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