What if as a society we wasted less and reused more, to give items a second lease of life; to extend product life so we can manufacture less new products and grow a more prosperous, circular economy? It’s time to say goodbye to the consumerism of buying something brand new at high cost, using it for a couple of years (or just a couple of weeks if it’s fast fashion) and then sending it to landfill; and say hello to being more resourceful and making things last.
Read on to find out how a network of repair cafes is already making this happen, or skip ahead to get more ideas of how to do something bigger and reduce the waste impact in your area.
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150 community repair cafes in Wales
Repair Cafe Wales
With backing from the Wales Council for Voluntary Action and the Welsh government circular economy team, Repair Cafe Wales runs a huge network of 150 repair cafes across Wales, helping local communities to manage repair cafes so they can fix household items. They’re all supported by a central team but each local organiser is responsible for setting up and running the cafe in their community. Every repair cafe has the same aim: to repair items free of charge so they can be reused, reduce landfill, save people money, share skills and build a stronger community. Each of these repair cafes is a powerful reminder that repair is a practical action we can take locally to transform our relationship with the things we own and the systems we choose to participate in.
Beating heart of the right-to-repair movement
The Right to Repair is a movement to make sure everyone has the right to fix the products they own. It aims to change regulations on how these things are made in the first place, to make them easy and affordable to repair, as well as to expand our rights after purchase. Repair cafes play a pivotal role in this shift by fostering a culture of repair. In a society conditioned to replace rather than repair, every one of these community spaces challenges the notion that a broken device is junk, destined for landfill.
Repairing our society
Beyond the clear environmental benefits of reducing waste and promoting more sustainable behaviours, research shows that repair cafes strengthen social and individual wellbeing. They connect different people and bridge across sub-communities; they include those who might otherwise be unable to afford it; and they build norms such as reciprocity and trust that benefit society as a whole. In addition, repair cafes also promote wellbeing by developing people’s skills and sense of empowerment and create a newfound joy from taking positive, practical, communal action.
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Inspiration listen
Do Something Bigger
What would inspire you to do something bigger for climate and nature? In this, the first episode of the Carbon Copy Podcast series, Do Something Bigger, we introduce our year-long campaign: 25…
Do something bigger
Do you believe we have enough ‘stuff’ already and would like to do something bigger to help change our consumption practices? So many things can be repaired and reused, from electronics to bikes to clothing, and so many interesting ways to have an impact in your community, through your company and as a public service provider.
With special thanks
to our partners: