European phone habits cost up to €2,574 per device

A new study from Fraunhofer Austria, commissioned by refurbed, Ireland’s leading online market place for refurbished goods, shows that the way people buy, use and dispose of their smartphones is quietly costing them hundreds – and in some cases thousands – of euro more than it needs to.

The research, which models the full six-year lifecycle of an average smartphone in Europe with a new retail price of €575, finds that consumers can cut the total cost of owning a phone by between 25% and 76% simply by changing how long they hold onto the device, whether they trade it in and how they dispose of it at end of life.

The findings land at a moment of rapid change in the Irish mobile market. According to ComReg’s 2025 Mobile Consumer Experience Survey, the second-hand phone market in Ireland has more than doubled since 2022, from 6% of purchases to 13% in 2025. Yet three in five Irish phones in use today are still two years old or less – pointing to a churn cycle that is costing consumers unnecessarily.

The €2,574 question: how you use a phone matters more than what you paid for it

The Fraunhofer study modelled three scenarios for the same average European smartphone usage:

  • Circular use: the phone is bought new, used for three years, traded in and refurbished, used for another three years, then properly recycled. Total six-year cost: €959 (€876 purchase + €83 environmental costs), producing 83kg of CO₂ and consuming 38g of critical raw materials.

  • Average European use: the phone is used for three years, then left in a drawer, and eventually ends up in household waste. Total six-year cost: €1,294 (€1,150 purchase + €144 environmental), producing 161kg of CO₂ and consuming 115g of critical raw materials.

  • Linear “throwaway” use: the phone is replaced every year; older devices sit unused or are sent to illegal recycling in the Global South. Total six-year cost: €3,834 (€3,450 purchase + €384 environmental), producing 684kg of CO₂ and consuming 346g of critical raw materials.

Compared with circular use, the average European approach costs nearly 35% more, produces twice the emissions, and consumes almost three times the critical raw materials. The linear model costs four times more than circular, with eight times the emissions and nine times the raw material consumption.

The pressure on critical raw materials – cobalt, copper, magnesium, palladium and others that Europe overwhelmingly imports – rises sharply across the three models: from 38g in circular use, to 115g in average use, to 346g in linear use per device.

“The Fraunhofer data puts a number on something Irish consumers already sense,” says Kilian Kaminski, Co-Founder of refurbed. “Through usage behaviour alone – reselling, keeping a phone longer, or disposing of it properly – consumers can save at least €274 and up to €2,574 per device over six years. That is real money at a time when Irish consumers are more and more worried about their personal finances. For iPhone users, the savings potential is significantly higher.”

Ireland’s drawer problem

The study’s findings have particular resonance in Ireland, where the Central Statistics Office found that seven in ten internet users said their most recently disposed-of mobile phone is still sitting at home. Just 9% brought it to an e-waste collection or recycling centre. The pattern is generational: 24% of 16–29 year olds sold or gave away their old phone, compared with just 5% of those aged 75 and over.

“It was important for us to calculate results at the product level rather than for specific consumer groups, to avoid unnecessary consumer blaming,” says study author Paul Rudorf. “Every product must first be produced, which already entails costs and environmental impact. What happens after production makes the decisive difference. Our data shows that usage type, duration and disposal have a significantly greater impact on both consumer costs and the environment.”

The full Fraunhofer Austria white paper is available on request.

realme joins forces with top operators to provide ECO Rating labelling for smartphones

realme, the world’s fastest-growing smartphone brand and top 5 Android smartphone brand globally, furthers its commitment and vision of being a sustainable company that contributes to a better world, as the realme 8 5G and 8i smartphones have been recognised by the cross-industry Eco Rating labelling scheme.

Eco Rating has been created jointly by five of Europe’s leading mobile operators to launch the pan-industry labelling scheme – Deutsche Telekom, Orange, Telefónica (operating under the O2 and Movistar brands), Telia Company and Vodafone.

By evaluating the environmental impact of the entire process of production, transportation, use and disposal of mobile phones, Eco Rating helps customers to make informed and sustainable choices, providing an overall score from 1 to 100. The closer the score is to 100, the better the sustainability of the device.

The realme 8 5G and 8i have both been awarded high scores of 76/100 and 80/100, respectively. Both devices achieved similarly high results in the key area of resource efficiency, with the 8 5G being awarded a score of 85/100 and the 8i 90/100, representing a low impact on the scarcity of resources. 

Commenting on the new ratings, Madhav Sheth, Vice President of realme, President of realme International Business Group, CEO of realme Europe, said, “As an industry, we have a commitment towards a better future, and at realme, being transparent with our users via the Eco Rating labelling scheme is a positive step towards realising that future. We at realme stand by this with the new 8 5G and 8i ratings, as well as our E-Waste Management Program which incentivises the safe recycling of electronic waste and strive to launch the most eco-friendly products in the near future.” 


“In line with a series of products we have launched, including smartphones, earphones, and tablets, we proactively advocate the combination of technology and environment, Going and Living Green.”

“Simultaneously, we are developing a unique eco-friendly smartphone, with endeavours to tremendously reduce CO2 emissions. The product will arrive in Europe in the near future.”

SolarAdTek lighting retrofit sees a significant cut in carbon emissions from bus shelters.

Dublin-based Solar AdTek, the leading developer and supplier of innovative solar powered lighting for outdoor advertising has completed an upgrade of 1,800 bus shelter units across Ireland and significantly decreased their carbon emissions.  SolarAdTek is responsible for the delivery of the bus shelter lighting project which is being funded by the ESB in a partnership arrangement with JCDecaux, on behalf of the National Transport Authority (NTA).

The newly installed lighting reduces operating costs, provides enhanced illumination and most significantly reduces carbon emissions.  John Bouchier, Co-Founder, of Solar AdTek said ”As a result of the upgrade, energy usage by the NTA bus shelters has reduced by 88%, saving over 1,000 tonnes in carbon emissions annually. This is the equivalent to the average energy consumption for 461 homes.”

The work has greatly improved the quality of the bus shelters with the removal of all fluorescent tubes and the introduction by Solar AdTek of more environmentally friendly and better-quality roof and ad panel LED lighting.

The bus shelters are now using smart technology to regulate the flow of electrical current, which ensures the shelter lights only come on between the hours of dusk and dawn, thus further reducing energy consumption.

The ESB has funded the project in a partnership arrangement with outdoor advertising company JCDecaux, who have the contract for advertising rights and maintenance of NTA bus shelters in Dublin and around the country.

“We were delighted to have had the opportunity to bring this solution to JCDecaux and the National Transport Authority in partnership with ESB and that the first national co-funded roll-out has now been completed,” said Eoin O’Broin, CEO, Solar AdTek. “We have developed our solar and lighting systems specifically for the outdoor advertising market and have no doubt our model can be both replicated and significantly scaled for international markets.”

Solar AdTek provides solar powered LED lighting systems to illuminate outdoor advertising displays such as bus shelters and billboards. These systems combine a proprietary Solar Control Unit and customised LED lighting modules with best-in-class solar panels and batteries to deliver autonomous, reliable and cost effective off-grid lighting solutions.

The company can replace existing fluorescent tubes with bespoke LED lighting, which provides an energy saving of up to 88%. Solar AdTek’s in-built mobile communications network allows for real time passenger Information signs, remote system diagnostics, advertisement viewers, passing traffic counters and environmental sensors.