Monday, June 17, 2013

Cuba and Planned Obsolescence

Cuba and Planned Obsolescence
June 16, 2013
Daisy Valera

HAVANA TIMES — If memory serves me right, the first electrical
appliances I ever used were the Orbita fan which afforded me a cool
night's sleep the few nights without power cuts, the iron that smoothed
out all of the uniforms I ever had to wear (from primary to high school)
and a green Aurika washing machine which always looked on the verge of
falling apart when tumbling clothes dry – and always, incidentally,
remained in one piece.

Many of these appliances, manufactured in the former Soviet Union over
30 years ago, continue to be used in Cuban homes. "Russian irons"
continue to be repaired at workshops and the metallic jars for the
Soviet-made Eta blenders continue to be produced at street-level.

It comes as no surprise that, during the flamboyant "Energy Revolution"
Cuba undertook in the early 2000s, many people who owned
Frigidaire-brand refrigerators or air conditioning units made in the
USSR, refused to trade these in for their new Chinese counterparts.

Not long after these replacements were made, some of the appliances
which have been roughing it for decades conserve their aura of
immortality, while the modern Haier refrigerators and Liya rice cookers
pile up like junk at repair shops and warehouses.

Today, Cubans are becoming accustomed to the disposable and fragile
nature of a new generation of electrical appliances and begin to feel
pangs of nostalgia for the times of durable – and repairable – devices.

It is within this context, a world governed by the
buy-throw-away-buy-again logic, that the SOP ("Sin Obsolescencia
Programada", "No Planned Obsolescence") movement arises. Planned
obsolescence, a concept that is almost entirely new to Cubans, refers to
the practice of deliberately producing short-durability objects in order
to keep consumers purchasing new products.

Though "consumerism" is not one of the more serious ills endured by a
country with constant shortages, planned obsolescence affects the lives
of Cubans for two fundamental reasons:
— The appliances sold in the country are not manufactured locally, but
imported.
— Cubans earn ridiculously low wages.

A Cuban earning an average salary (450 Cuban pesos a month) would need
to put away his entire wages, every month for over two years, to be able
to purchase an iron, a blender and a TV (about 20, 50 and 400 CUC,
respectively) at a hard-currency store.

This fact alone makes the abovementioned, short-lived electrical
appliances irreplaceable treasures in Cuba.

The SOP movement, impelled by Spanish engineer Benito Muros, aims to
sell products that aren't designed to have a short lifespan and are
environmentally-friendly, drastically reducing the volumes of waste
materials produced by today's modern products.

Muros' company, OEP Electrics, has created a light bulb "without planned
obsolescence" that has a guaranteed lifespan of 25 years and can be
repaired and reused indefinitely. In addition, the light bulb saves up
to 92 % in electricity and produces 70 % less carbon dioxide.

If the Cuban State is at all interested in an energy revolution that
actually yields results, it should lend an ear to the SOP movement and
do away with Cuba's so-called energy-saving bulbs, electrical stoves and
fearsome Parker brand DVD players.

A positive first step, for instance, would be to build a plant for the
manufacturing of Muros' bulbs on the island.

Source: "Cuba and Planned Obsolescence - Cuba's Havana Times.org" -
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=94737

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