Fairphone

There’s no guarantee due to the liquid crystal display (like laptops) that any phone is vegan. But you can choose brands that are made from recycled plastic and are repairable (not glued in so you have to send them off to be repaired).

The recent Right to Repair Act excludes phones and laptops, which rather defeats the object. Apple threw its toys out of the pram and eventually conceded, but now sells an expensive DIY repair kit, which is not really much better. The alternative of course is to buy a used smartphone, rather than buy new (or go without – Ed Sheeran does, he hasn’t owned a phone for years, saying it made him sad and stressed!)

Fairphone 5 is made with conflict-free recycled materials and easy to repair. In a world where there are more phones than people, their Keep Club gives rewards,  the longer you keep your existing phone. You can also recycle your old phone, to redeem credit against your next one.

Fairphone headphones

It also sells climate-conscious headphones made from 80% recycled plastic and 100% recycled aluminium, in a folding design that you can repair yourself. Made with a living wage, these are built to last and they recycle the same amount of electronic waste, for each pair bought.

Teracube 2e looks like a regular smartphone but you don’t have to ditch and upgrade it every 2 years. It has a 4-year premium care warranty and can be repaired (even by yourself). While big tech companies glue phones shut and force customers into expensive in-house repairs and unnecessary upgrades, this company puts customers and the planet first.

The phone is made with 25% recycled polycarbonate and has a replaceable battery with full HD+ display and dual rear cameras and a front-facing camera. You also get a pre-fitted screen protector, charging cable and biodegradable case, sent in minimal recycled packaging.

TeraCube Thrive is a safe smartphone for children (child psychologists suggest age 11 is the minimum age). This phone sets time limits with built-in location tracking and also blocks unsafe searches (and unapproved callers).

Doro 8100 is not just ‘a smartphone for seniors’ but for anyone fed up with the constant designer one-upmanship in the mobile phone industry. Most of us like to have a phone, if only for emergencies. This one has all you need (including an emergency assistance key) but no more.

giffgaff is a people-owned phone company that also sells refurbished phones online. The phones carry a 12-month warranty and you get free next-day delivery with 80% battery health or better. You can search by brand and trade in your own old phone to help pay for the cost.

where to recycle unwanted phones

Don’t just throw away your old phone, as it will leach chemicals. If not trading it in, you can send it off in a freepost envelope to Recycling for Good Causes, and they will pass proceeds from recycling the metals to your chosen little local charity. Or find your nearest recycling facility.

Alternatively, get someone to host the box, and everyone in the community can deposit their used mobile phones and accessories with TerraCycle, that sends it off to make into other goods. The box costs around £100 (funded by a council or you could all pool £1 each). It’s like a town amnesty, to get all the rubbish out of your town, that councils can’t recycle. It takes phones and screen protectors but not batteries (put them in your local battery recycling bin).

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