Product repair in a circular economy: Exploring public repair behavior from a systems perspective

Author:

Parajuly Keshav12ORCID,Green James3,Richter Jessika4ORCID,Johnson Michael2,Rückschloss Jana5,Peeters Jef67ORCID,Kuehr Ruediger12,Fitzpatrick Colin2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sustainable Cycles (SCYLCE) Programme United Nations Institute for Training and Research Bonn Germany

2. Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering University of Limerick Limerick Ireland

3. School of Allied Health and Physical Activity for Health Research Cluster, Health Research Institute University of Limerick Limerick Ireland

4. International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics Lund University Lund Sweden

5. Department of Environmental and Reliability Engineering Fraunhofer Institute for Reliability and Microintegration IZM Berlin Germany

6. Department of Mechanical Engineering KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

7. Core Lab VCCM Flanders Make Leuven Belgium

Abstract

AbstractRepair practices are driven not only by consumers’ internal motivation, but also by external infrastructural, social including cultural, financial, and political factors. We explore these factors with the goal of understanding the public repair of electrical and electronic products (e‐products) from a systems perspective to help devise appropriate change interventions. We document (a) behavioral aspects, (b) techno‐economic factors, and (c) intervention strategies aimed at promoting repair practices. To gauge this, a survey was administered among 922 volunteers across 14 countries with experience in repairing e‐products at public repair events. Findings suggest that while behavioral constructs including personal values, beliefs, and attitudes toward product repair are the main proximal drivers of intention to repair, the ability to repair plays an important role. Further, these individual factors are influenced by the techno‐economic settings such as access to repair services, economic benefits, and the ease of product repair stands out as the key enablers for product lifetime extension. As per intervention strategies, the results highlight economic incentives, regulatory requirements, and public awareness as the key drivers. However, influencing repair behavior directly may not always be the most effective strategy. New initiatives to improve involvement should focus on more repairable products, exploiting the innovative potentials of commercial as well as non‐profit repair initiatives, education, and supporting the development of skills among volunteer repairers.

Funder

Irish Research Council

Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Social Sciences,General Environmental Science

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