The French don’t need President Macron to tell us to make do and mend | Agnès Poirier
In France, we have no petrol, but we have ideas." So goes a popular French saying born in the 1970s during the oil crisis. Said differently, France is a champion of quirky initiatives that can feel both admirable and somewhat pointless. The latest in a series of eco-friendly measures taken by the French government is the repair bonus". Instead of throwing into the bin a pair of ripped trousers, a bag with a broken strap or a moth-eaten polo neck, the state will pay for them to be mended at your local cobbler or retoucheur (sewing workshops). From October and for the next five years, we will be able to claim back between 6-25 of the costs of mending our clothes and shoes with artisans who have joined the scheme.
The hope is to help create a virtuous circle, change habits for the planet's sake (700,000 tonnes of clothing is thrown away in France every year), sustain local artisans and even create jobs in what we now need to call the refashion" sector. Three years ago, a similar scheme encouraged my compatriots to fix their old toasters or rickety washing machines, rather than dispose of them out of frustration. Legislators even obliged companies to revise their obsolescence strategy by publishing a repairability index" for each item produced. Consumers can now buy new home appliances knowing in advance how easy (or difficult) they are to repair.
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