UK reconsidering USB-C charger mandate, after everyone else has already shifted

By William Gallagher

The new UK government is considering reversing its predecessor's refusal to adopt the EU USB-C charger mandate, while Apple holds its breath for the future of the iPhone.

A USB-C charging cable

Just over a year before the UK's long-standing Conservative government was voted out of office in mid-2024, it made one of its many anti-European Union moves. It declared that it would not copy the EU's USB-C common charger standard.

The official wording included the phrase "so there," but out of all such declarations, this was the smallest and also the easiest. It was small because the UK had other concerns, that's entirely why the government was trying to distract people by looking as if they were taking action on something.

And it was a particularly easy declaration because it did not and does not matter what Britain does about chargers. While all Big Tech firms do provide a UK-specific power adapter, none of them were ever going to produce a model without USB-C just because that government said they could.

Now the current Labour government of the UK has announced that it is reconsidering all of this, even though it is exactly as pointless as it ever was -- for exactly the same reasons. As first spotted by MacRumors, the government has issued a call for evidence over adopting a common charger.

"We are seeking views from manufacturers, importers, distributors, and trade associations as to whether it would be helpful to do so," says the new Open Call for Evidence, "and, if so, whether this should be based on USB-C -- as adopted by the EU."

The European Union has forced the adoption of USB-C as a common charger, with the disputable logic that it will save e-waste. The EU's law mandated that all new smartphones use USB-C by 2024, although Apple complied earlier than that with the iPhone 15 range.

As a result, Apple switched to USB-C charging for all of its iPhones, arguably sooner than it might have intended. But the switch has been made, it's been made worldwide, so every iPhone sold in Britain already uses USB-C chargers.

Consequently, the UK's new move really just means that manufacturers, distributors, consumers, and trade associations, are invited to shrug. Should this somehow rise to the top of Tim Cook's To Do list, he and anyone else passing, has until December 4, 2024 to respond.