European Commission Officially Announces The Use Of USB C For All Mobile Devices

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USB-C

The European Union has officially announced that starting from 2024, USB-C will become the universal standard for electronic devices in the EU. This decision marks the end of a long wait for a unified charging interface, aiming to improve charging technology, reduce electronic waste, and make it easier for consumers to find the chargers they need.

Under this new regulation, USB-C will serve as the common interface across the EU, allowing consumers to use any USB-C charger for any brand of device. The mandate will apply to a wide range of handheld devices, including mobile phones, tablets, digital cameras, headphones, portable speakers, handheld gaming consoles, e-readers, earbuds, keyboards, mice, and portable navigation systems. By 2026, the requirement will also extend to laptops.

The journey to a unified USB-C interface has not been straightforward. In 2009, there were as many as 30 different charging interfaces on the market. Under the pressure of the EU Commission, 14 smartphone manufacturers, including Apple, adjusted their products, gradually reducing the variety to USB-C, Lightning, and Micro-USB interfaces.

Micro-USB has been gradually phased out due to technological reasons, leaving Apple’s Lightning interface as the major obstacle to unification. In September 2021, the EU Commission formally proposed a bill to make USB-C the universal standard for all mobile devices within the EU, with a 24-month transition period.

Apple initially strongly opposed this move, expressing concerns that such strict regulation of chargers would stifle rather than encourage innovation, ultimately harming consumers in Europe and around the world. However, the European Parliament passed the bill on October 4, 2022, with an overwhelming majority, mandating that portable smart electronic devices must have a unified USB Type-C charging interface.

In September of this year, Apple announced that the iPhone 15 would switch to a USB-C interface. With this change, USB-C has now become the dominant interface, settling the dust on the issue of charging standardization.

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