For the budget-conscious people out there, while buying a new laptop, finding an affordable one with good features and specs is likely the obvious choice. This applied especially during the pandemic. With the widespread adoption of remote learning, school districts in the US, and elsewhere in the world, had been searching for a cost-effective laptop that can be purchased in large quantities and distributed to students. For many, Google Chromebook appeared to be the best solution. A few years down the line, these affordable Chromebooks that schools in the US purchased during the pandemic to support remote learning have started to break down, a report by the US Public Interest Research Group Education Fund (PIRG) warned.
The report further added that during the final quarter of 2020, sales of Chromebooks had skyrocketed by 287 percent compared to the previous year. However, three years later, these laptops are increasingly failing, resulting in the accumulation of electronic waste and burdening these schools with extra expenses.
The production of a computer requires a significant amount of resources and energy. As a matter of fact, the information technology industry is believed to produce greenhouse gas emissions at a similar level as the airline industry, the report suggested. In the first year of the pandemic alone, over 31 million Chromebooks were sold worldwide, resulting in approximately 8.9 million tons of CO2e emissions. However, when such technology, including Chromebooks, is not built to last, our environment bears the consequences- only one-third of the electronic waste is appropriately recycled.
Chromebooks are designed with a predetermined "end-of-life" date, which marks the end of software support. The
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