Beyond the Trend: Rechargeable Lighting, E-waste to go?

Beyond the Trend: Rechargeable Lighting, E-waste to go?

May 14, 2025
Tom Acciarini, Business Development and Marketing Manager
By Tom Acciarini - Business Development and Marketing Manager

 

We live in an age of mobility. Phones, laptops, vacuum cleaners, even lighting, now the promising freedom from the plug. Rechargeable lights, in particular, have come to symbolise convenience and modernity, yet this mobility comes at a cost.

Within interiors, especially in homes, hospitality spaces, and workplaces, rechargeable lights are frequently adopted not because they are essential, but because they are fashionable. The idea of flexibility has been elevated above the question of necessity and in this lies a quiet contradiction.



 

When rechargeable lights replace traditional corded models in static interior settings, the environmental implications deepen. According to the European Environment Agency, lithium-ion batteries, the most common power source in rechargeable lights, are classified as hazardous waste when discarded and must be handled with strict protocols to avoid groundwater contamination and fire risk. Yet a 2023 report from the Global E-waste Monitor notes that only 17.4% of the world’s electronic waste was formally documented as properly collected and recycled [1].

Rechargeable lights are often sealed units. When the battery fails, which can happen after just 500 to 1,000 charging cycles depending on usage and quality, replacement is impractical or impossible. The result is a product designed for obsolescence, not longevity.



 

This dynamic feeds directly into the wider issue of ‘fast interiors’. Much like fast fashion, it describes the accelerated turnover of design objects, driven more by trend than function. The Furniture Industry Research Association (FIRA) has warned that the UK alone discards 22 million pieces of furniture and lighting annually, with many items still in usable condition [2].

I find this deeply concerning as innovation must serve a purpose beyond novelty. Corded lights, particularly those that are designed for maintenance and repair, often outperform their rechargeable counterparts in environmental terms over a ten-year lifecycle; most will at best reach half that lifespan. At this point, a corded repairable lamp base will outlast the battery equivalent by a factor of 3 or more.

Not every light needs to be mobile. We must ask ourselves not just what we use, but why we use it.

BeyondTheTrend SustainableInteriors CircularDesign LightingIndustry Ewaste FastInteriors IberianLighting


Sources:
[1] Forti, V., Baldé, C.P., Kuehr, R., & Bel, G. (2023). The Global E-waste Monitor 2023. United Nations University, ITU & ISWA.
[2] Furniture Industry Research Association (2022). Environmental Impact of Furniture Waste in the UK.



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