Nokia Confirms Dual Charging For Handsets
Nokia confirms it will offer dual charging options, following moves by the EC to establish a “universal charger”
Nokia has confirmed that its future mobile phones will have the ability to recharge using either the conventional 2mm Nokia charger, but will also support the micro USB charging option.
A standard for this micro USB-based universal charger option for mobile phones was agreed by mobile phone makers in late December, so that handsets from different makers can be charged using the same charging solution.
Nokia made the announcement in a blog post earlier this week.
Universal Charger
“Following the recent publication of charging standards, the new chargers will use the micro USB connector – already in use for the data connection in many smartphones,” said the blog.
“The majority of current Nokia devices already support micro USB-based charging, going forward this will be the industry standard. In addition, Nokia’s standard 2mm charger will continue to be supported, so standard Nokia chargers will still be usable as well,” it added.
Nokia said that the decision was good news because it meant that users didn’t need a new charger for their new mobile phone, and no longer meant hunting for someone in the office who has the same brand of phone when you need a power top-up away from home.
It cited the obvious green benefits, because the environmental impact created by discarding old chargers when users switch to other manufacturers’ devices will be eliminated.
Another green benefit is the potential ability of the phone makers to sell new mobile phones, without any chargers at all, a development which Nokia is currently piloting in order to gauge customer reaction.
Two Year Process
Besides the e-waste benefits however, the new universal charger has previously been mooted to have close to a 50 percent reduction in standby energy consumption, coupled with the elimination of 51,000 tonnes of redundant chargers, and a subsequent reduction of 13.6 million tonnes in greenhouse gas emissions each year.
The industry and European regulators have been discussing plans for a universal charger for a while now. It was back in June 2009 that the world’s largest phone makers signed up to the European standard for a standard micro-USB charger.
Then in October 2009, the concept received the backing of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), a specialist agency of the United Nations.
What followed next, however, was a 14 month wait until last month, when the industry finally agreed to the universal charger standard.
The European Commission has launched a website on the subject, and Nokia has posted an online video here.