The Repair Revolution: Why Learning to Fix Things Is a Green Superpower
The Repair Revolution: Why Learning to Fix Things Is a Green Superpower “The greenest washing machine is often the one you already own.” We are very good at talking about recycling. We have recycling bins, recycling labels, recycling collections, recycling symbols and, occasionally, recycling confusion when nobody can decide whether a yoghurt pot lid belongs in the blue bin, the green bin, the food caddy or a small museum of modern plastic anxiety. But before recycling comes something much more powerful. Repair. Many environmental problems do not begin when something reaches the bin. They begin much earlier, at the moment we decide that a perfectly useful object is no longer worth the effort. A shirt loses a button. A toaster stops working. A garden tool becomes blunt. A chair leg wobbles. A boat fitting comes loose. A piece of science equipment starts behaving like a sulky teenager. And too often, the modern answer is: “Throw it away and buy another one.” That may be convenient,...