Saturday, June 20, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, June 21 2026



The Refurbished Revolution: Why Europe Is Falling in Love With Used Electronics — and What It Means for the Future


How rising prices, resource scarcity, and climate pressures are turning refurbished goods from a niche market into a mainstream economic force.



Introduction: The End of the Throwaway Economy?

For decades, modern consumer culture was built around a simple promise: buy new, discard old, repeat.

Manufacturers released new smartphones every year. Retailers encouraged constant upgrades. Consumers were taught to associate "new" with "better."

That model is beginning to crack.

Across Europe, millions of consumers are choosing refurbished products instead of brand-new ones. What was once seen as a compromise is increasingly viewed as a smart financial and environmental decision.

At the center of this transformation stands Refurbed, a Vienna-based company that has become one of Europe's fastest-growing marketplaces for professionally renewed electronics.

But Refurbed's story is about more than smartphones. It offers a glimpse into a much larger shift—one that could fundamentally reshape how industrial societies consume resources in the coming decades.

The question is no longer whether refurbishment will grow.

The question is whether refurbishment could become as normal as buying a used car.


What Exactly Is Refurbed?

Founded in Vienna in 2017, Refurbed has grown into one of Europe's largest marketplaces dedicated exclusively to refurbished products.

Unlike general marketplaces that mix new, used, and refurbished items, Refurbed specializes in professionally restored goods that undergo inspection, repair, cleaning, testing, and certification before resale.

The company now operates in 24 European markets and lists approximately 65,000 products.

Its catalog has expanded far beyond smartphones and laptops to include:

  • Kitchen appliances
  • Household electronics
  • Sports equipment
  • Baby products
  • Children's equipment
  • E-bikes
  • Vacuum cleaners
  • Coffee machines

Refurbed works with roughly 300–350 refurbishment partners and also cooperates directly with manufacturers including Dyson, AEG, and Kärcher.

Since its founding, the company reports more than €3 billion in cumulative gross merchandise volume (GMV) and reached profitability at the group level in 2025.


The Three Categories Consumers Constantly Confuse

One reason many buyers hesitate is because the terms "used," "renewed," and "refurbished" are often mixed together.

They are not the same.

Used

A used product is sold largely "as-is."

Examples:

  • eBay listings
  • Facebook Marketplace
  • Local classified ads
  • Garage sales

The seller typically offers little or no warranty.

Risk is transferred almost entirely to the buyer.

Advantages

  • Lowest prices
  • Large selection
  • Potential bargains

Disadvantages

  • Unknown history
  • No professional inspection
  • Hidden defects
  • Short remaining lifespan
  • Little legal protection

Refurbished

A refurbished product has been professionally restored before resale.

The process typically includes:

  • Diagnostic testing
  • Data wiping
  • Component replacement
  • Battery health verification
  • Cleaning
  • Functional certification

Many refurbished products include warranties and return rights.

Advantages

  • Significant discount versus new
  • Lower risk than used goods
  • Environmental benefits
  • Warranty protection

Disadvantages

  • Cosmetic imperfections possible
  • Quality standards vary
  • Battery performance may differ from new
  • Market standards remain inconsistent

New

The traditional benchmark.

Advantages

  • Latest technology
  • Maximum lifespan
  • Full manufacturer warranty
  • No prior wear

Disadvantages

  • Highest cost
  • Largest environmental footprint
  • Rapid depreciation

A new smartphone can lose 20–40% of its value within a year.


Why Smartphones Became the Gateway Drug

Refurbed's largest category remains smartphones.

The reason is simple.

Consumers replace phones more frequently than almost any other major household product.

Typical replacement cycles:

ProductAverage Replacement Cycle
Smartphone2–4 years
Laptop4–6 years
Vacuum Cleaner7–10 years
Coffee Machine5–10 years
Refrigerator10–15 years

Because smartphones circulate through the economy faster, they generate enormous inventories for refurbishment.

Corporate device fleets are especially important.

When large organizations upgrade thousands of employees from one phone generation to another, huge quantities of relatively recent devices suddenly become available.

Today, models such as the Apple iPhone 14 and Apple iPhone 15 dominate Europe's refurbished inventory.


The Hidden Gold Mine Sitting in Your Drawer

One of the most striking statistics cited by Refurbed comes from research conducted by the Austrian branch of the Fraunhofer Institute.

More than 600 million smartphones are believed to be lying unused in European households.

Approximately 200 million of those devices could potentially be refurbished and reused.

Think about that for a moment.

Europe is simultaneously:

  • Importing raw materials
  • Mining new metals
  • Manufacturing new devices
  • Emitting carbon

while hundreds of millions of functional electronics sit forgotten in drawers.

This is not merely consumer waste.

It represents a vast untapped resource reserve.


The Economic Case for Refurbishment

Environmental arguments receive most of the attention.

But economics are driving adoption.

Consumers across Europe face:

  • Inflation
  • Higher housing costs
  • Rising energy bills
  • Stagnant purchasing power

A refurbished device that costs 20–30% less than a new equivalent becomes increasingly attractive.

For many households, sustainability is a bonus.

Affordability is the deciding factor.

This mirrors a broader historical pattern:

People often adopt environmentally beneficial behavior not because they become environmentalists—but because the behavior saves money.


The Environmental Case Is Even Stronger

The production phase dominates the environmental impact of electronics.

For many devices:

  • Most carbon emissions occur during manufacturing.
  • Most rare-earth extraction occurs before first use.
  • Most resource depletion occurs before the consumer even opens the box.

Extending a device's lifespan by several years dramatically reduces its lifetime environmental footprint.

A smartphone used for six years instead of three effectively spreads manufacturing impacts across twice the service life.

This is the central logic behind the circular economy.

The greenest product is often not the newest one.

It is the one already sitting on a shelf.


The Biggest Problem: There Is No Universal Standard

One surprising reality remains.

Europe still lacks comprehensive refurbishment standards.

That creates several problems:

Problem 1: Different Definitions

One company may call a product "refurbished" after extensive testing.

Another may merely clean it and reset the software.

Consumers often cannot distinguish between them.


Problem 2: Battery Quality

Battery degradation remains the most common concern.

Questions include:

  • What minimum battery health is acceptable?
  • When should batteries be replaced?
  • How should battery condition be disclosed?

Different vendors answer differently.


Problem 3: Transparency

Many consumers struggle to understand condition ratings such as:

  • Excellent
  • Very Good
  • Good
  • Acceptable

Without standard definitions, expectations vary.

This remains one of the industry's largest challenges.


The Manufacturer Dilemma

Manufacturers face a difficult strategic question.

Refurbishment supports sustainability goals.

But it may also reduce sales of new products.

This creates a classic conflict.

A company selling a refurbished device may prevent the sale of a new one.

Many manufacturers therefore embrace refurbishment cautiously.

Some participate.

Some resist.

Some attempt to build their own refurbishment ecosystems.

Yet independent marketplaces continue growing because consumers increasingly want:

  • Price transparency
  • Product comparisons
  • Cross-brand choices

rather than remaining inside a single manufacturer's ecosystem.


The Ultimate Consumer Adaptation Guide

If economic uncertainty, resource constraints, and climate pressures continue intensifying, refurbishment may become one of the smartest adaptation strategies available to ordinary households.

Here is a practical framework.


Buy New Only When Necessary

Ask:

  • Is this genuinely new technology?
  • Does it provide a meaningful improvement?
  • Is my current device actually failing?

If not, delay replacement.

The cheapest purchase is often the one you never make.


Refurbished First

For:

  • Smartphones
  • Laptops
  • Tablets
  • Monitors
  • Coffee machines
  • Vacuum cleaners

check refurbished options before buying new.

The savings can be substantial.


Avoid the Cheapest Used Electronics

A suspiciously cheap used device often becomes expensive later.

Refurbished products with warranties usually provide a better risk-reward balance.


Sell Before Value Collapses

Electronics lose value rapidly.

Trade-in or resale immediately after upgrading maximizes recovery.

Every year of delay reduces potential value.


Keep Original Packaging

Boxes, chargers, and documentation increase resale value.

Think like a future seller when buying.


Learn Basic Repairs

Simple skills matter:

  • Battery replacement
  • Screen replacement
  • Cleaning cooling systems
  • Replacing storage drives

Repair literacy is becoming a survival skill in the circular economy.


Think in Lifetime Cost

A new $1,500 phone lasting three years costs:

$500 per year.

A refurbished $750 phone lasting three years costs:

$250 per year.

The relevant metric is not purchase price.

It is cost per year of useful service.


The Contra Argument: What Critics Get Right

Refurbishment is not a magic solution.

Critics raise legitimate concerns.

Software Support

Older devices eventually lose updates.

Security risks can emerge.


Planned Obsolescence

Manufacturers may restrict parts availability or software compatibility.

This limits refurbishment potential.


Hidden Defects

Even professional refurbishment cannot eliminate all risk.

Some devices fail earlier than expected.


Logistics Emissions

Shipping products individually across continents creates emissions that partially offset environmental benefits.


Rebound Effects

Consumers who save money on refurbished goods may spend the savings on other carbon-intensive activities.

Environmental gains are therefore not always straightforward.


The Future: Refurbished as the New Normal?

Today, nobody thinks twice about purchasing a used car.

The vehicle is inspected.

Its condition is disclosed.

The market is regulated.

The transaction feels normal.

Refurbished electronics are moving toward the same destination.

If Europe succeeds in creating common standards, strengthening repair rights, guaranteeing spare parts access, and improving consumer trust, refurbishment could become a default purchasing option rather than a niche alternative.

The forces driving this transition are powerful:

  • Rising resource costs
  • Climate pressures
  • Economic uncertainty
  • Consumer demand for value
  • Regulatory support for repairability

The age of effortless abundance may be fading.

The age of intelligent reuse is just beginning.

And in that future, the smartest consumer may not be the one who buys the newest device.

It may be the one who knows how to keep a perfectly good device alive for another five years.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Friday, June 19, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, June 20 2026


 


Goldman Sachs Predicts the World Cup. Great. Now Can They Predict the Apocalypse?


An unfiltered, darkly humorous op-ed inspired by a German article on Goldman Sachs' World Cup forecasting model.


First, the Translation: What the Bankers Think They Know

Most people know Goldman Sachs as one of the most powerful investment banks on Earth. Every four years, however, its economists take a break from forecasting markets and turn their mathematical machinery toward football.

Led by chief economist Jan Hatzius, Goldman Sachs analysts built a statistical model using nearly 20,000 international matches dating back to 1978. Their conclusion: Spain is the most likely World Cup winner. Germany? Not so much.

The model relies heavily on the Elo rating system, which measures team strength based on wins and losses against opponents of varying quality.

Additional factors include:

  • Goal-scoring talent
  • Recent form and momentum
  • Psychological trends
  • Geography

Goal-scoring talent is measured through variables such as the number of elite scorers available to a team, recent goals scored, and the defensive records of opponents.

The economists even account for psychological quirks. Defending champions often perform poorly in the following tournament, a phenomenon they call the "winner's slump."

England receives a special statistical penalty because, historically, England has been remarkably reliable at disappointing its supporters.

Distance from home can also be a disadvantage. Playing thousands of miles away or at high altitude may reduce performance.

Using these variables, Goldman Sachs generated goal probabilities through a Poisson distribution and ran 50,000 tournament simulations.

Their most likely outcome:

  1. Spain wins the World Cup
  2. Argentina finishes second
  3. France finishes third
  4. Brazil finishes fourth

Germany is expected to survive the group stage but lose to France in the Round of 16.

The model gives Germany only a 4.5% chance of winning the tournament.

Goldman Sachs argues that Germany's biggest problem is not merely talent but bad luck in the tournament bracket.

The economists acknowledge major limitations:

  • Defensive quality is difficult to measure.
  • Coaching influence is largely ignored.
  • Injuries and randomness cannot be predicted.
  • The model treats goal scoring as statistically independent, creating unrealistic score distributions.

In short: football remains stubbornly resistant to complete mathematical control.

The article then turns to economics.

Goldman Sachs argues that World Cups primarily benefit industries such as:

  • Sportswear
  • Beverages
  • Consumer goods
  • Tourism
  • Airlines
  • Retail

Host countries, however, usually receive little long-term economic benefit.

Since 1982, host nations have shown no statistically significant long-term economic gains from hosting the tournament.

The biggest impact is often psychological rather than financial: national pride, excitement, and collective celebration.

Meanwhile, analysts at Morningstar DBRS are skeptical about FIFA's optimistic tourism forecasts for the current tournament.

They point to:

  • Weak international travel demand
  • Expensive tickets
  • Rising hotel prices
  • High transportation costs

Some reports suggest that hotels are seeing fewer bookings than expected.

One analyst summarized the economics bluntly:

Hosting a mega-event is usually an expense disguised as an investment.


Now For The Part Nobody Asked For

If Goldman Sachs Can Predict Football, Why Can't They Predict The Next Disaster?

This is where things get weird.

Not because Goldman Sachs built a World Cup model.

That's normal.

Banks forecast elections.
Banks forecast recessions.
Banks forecast inflation.
Banks forecast oil prices.
Banks forecast consumer behavior.

The modern world runs on prediction.

What is fascinating is how selective our faith in prediction becomes.

If a team of economists tells us Spain has a 26% chance of lifting a trophy six weeks from now, newspapers print it on the front page.

But if someone asks:

  • Which coastlines become uninsurable?
  • Which cities become unlivable during heat waves?
  • Which countries face water shortages?
  • Which industries disappear?
  • Which supply chains break?

Suddenly everyone becomes humble.

"Too complicated."

"Too many variables."

"Nobody knows."

Interesting.

Because the same institutions spend billions trying to know.


The Cult of the Spreadsheet

Modern civilization increasingly resembles a giant casino run by actuaries.

Everything is modeled.

Everything is priced.

Everything is assigned a probability.

The insurance industry already knows things most citizens don't.

The reinsurance industry knows even more.

The bond market often knows before politicians do.

Investors quietly flee risks years before the public notices.

By the time ordinary people hear the phrase:

"unexpected event"

someone somewhere has been pricing it into a spreadsheet for a decade.


The Beaver Question

This brings us to the most important policy question of the 21st century:

How Soon Should One Start Preparing Like A Beaver?

Not bunker-prepping.

Not Hollywood-prepping.

Not hiding in a mountain fortress eating canned beans until 2055.

Just ordinary adaptation.

Questions such as:

  • Should I diversify where I live?
  • Should I learn practical skills?
  • Should I reduce dependence on fragile systems?
  • Should I maintain emergency supplies?
  • Should I know my neighbors?

These are not extremist questions.

They're the questions humans have asked for thousands of years.

Civilization is the historical anomaly.

Preparation is the historical norm.



The Dark Joke

The darkest joke may be that humanity has never possessed more data.

We track:

  • Every click
  • Every purchase
  • Every flight
  • Every shipment
  • Every weather pattern

Yet many people still feel as if they're navigating history blindfolded.

Perhaps because prediction is not the same thing as preparation.

Knowing Spain might win the World Cup changes nothing.

Knowing your city may experience more extreme heat in twenty years changes everything.

One is trivia.

The other is adaptation.


Final Whistle

Goldman Sachs' football model is impressive.

But it also reveals something profound.

The future is no longer a crystal ball.

It's a probability distribution.

Nobody knows exactly what happens next.

Not the economists.

Not the politicians.

Not the billionaires.

Not the doom prophets on YouTube.

The real question is not whether Spain wins the World Cup.

The real question is whether ordinary people can stop treating resilience as a fringe hobby and start treating it as common sense.

Because if the people with the biggest computers on Earth are spending their days running 50,000 simulations of football matches, one cannot help wondering:

Who's running 50,000 simulations of the things that actually keep us awake at night?

And more importantly—

Do they already know something the rest of us are only beginning to suspect?


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, June 19 2026

 "A civilization that cannot give its people permission to rest is not suffering from a productivity crisis. It is suffering from an addiction to extraction."

-A.G.


Vacation Is Dead: Welcome to the Age of Permanent Work

The Great Scam Nobody Wants to Name


Forty percent of workers are not using all of their paid vacation time.

Read that again.

Not unpaid leave. Not optional sabbaticals. Not luxury travel benefits.

Paid vacation time.

Time they have already earned.

Time their employers officially tell them to take.

Time that exists on paper but increasingly disappears in reality.

Meanwhile, six out of ten workers report burnout. More than 4.1 million Canadians report high or very high work stress. Globally, 81 percent of workers now say they are at risk of burnout, up dramatically from 63 percent just a few years ago.

And yet we continue pretending this is a personal wellness problem.

It isn't.

It's a system problem.

The modern economy has quietly transformed vacation from a right into a career risk.


The Cult of Constant Availability

For decades, technology promised liberation.

Computers would save time.

Email would streamline communication.

Smartphones would make work flexible.

Artificial intelligence would eliminate drudgery.

Instead, something bizarre happened.

Every minute saved was immediately filled with more work.

The inbox became endless.

Meetings multiplied like bacteria.

Response expectations accelerated.

Deadlines shortened.

Staffing shrank.

Targets grew.

Workers didn't become more free.

They became more reachable.

The smartphone was marketed as freedom.

In practice, it became a digital leash.

Many workers now carry their workplace in their pocket every waking hour of every day.

The office no longer closes.

It simply follows you home.

Then follows you to the cottage.

Then follows you onto the beach.

Then follows you into bed.


The Productivity Lie

One of the most dangerous myths in modern society is that overwork creates productivity.

The evidence increasingly points in the opposite direction.

Burned-out workers make worse decisions.

Burned-out workers become less creative.

Burned-out workers make more mistakes.

Burned-out workers solve fewer problems.

Burned-out workers become physically ill.

Burned-out workers eventually quit.

Or collapse.

Or both.

What many organizations call productivity is actually resource extraction.

They're mining human beings the way a corporation mines a mountain.

Dig deeper.

Extract more.

Ignore warning signs.

Move faster.

Worry about consequences later.

The difference is that mountains don't develop anxiety disorders.

Humans do.


The Fear Economy

The most revealing statistic isn't that people skip vacations.

It's why.

Workers fear:

  • Work piling up while they're gone.
  • Being viewed as less committed.
  • Missing promotions.
  • Appearing replaceable.
  • Losing their jobs.

Think about that.

Many people are now afraid to use benefits they legally earned because they worry it signals weakness.

That is not healthy workplace culture.

That is organizational fear.

And fear is incredibly profitable.

Fear keeps workers connected.

Fear keeps workers available.

Fear keeps workers silent.

Fear keeps workers saying yes.

Fear keeps workers checking email from hotel rooms.

Fear keeps workers attending Zoom meetings from campgrounds.

Fear keeps workers sacrificing family, friendships, hobbies and health.

Fear keeps the machine running.


The Burnout Industry

An entire industry has emerged around helping workers survive burnout.

Mindfulness apps.

Resilience training.

Corporate wellness webinars.

Meditation subscriptions.

Stress management courses.

Breathing exercises.

Yoga challenges.

Sleep trackers.

Most are treating symptoms.

Few address causes.

Imagine a factory filling a room with toxic smoke.

Workers start coughing.

Management responds by handing out better cough drops.

That's modern burnout prevention.

The smoke remains.

Workers are simply expected to tolerate it better.


The Real Cost

The greatest cost isn't reduced productivity.

It isn't absenteeism.

It isn't health-care spending.

It's something harder to measure.

Presence.

Millions of people are physically present and mentally absent.

Parents answering emails at soccer games.

Partners checking messages during dinner.

Friends distracted during conversations.

Families competing with notifications.

Children learning that work always comes first.

A generation growing up watching adults who are never truly off.

The economic system doesn't count these losses.

But society pays for them anyway.


The Adaptation Guide: Escaping the Hamster Wheel

Waiting for corporations to solve this problem may be the longest wait of your life.

Adaptation starts with recognizing reality.

1. Stop Calling It "Balance"

Balance suggests equal forces.

Modern work is not balanced.

It is expansionary.

Work naturally consumes whatever space you allow it.

Treat boundaries like defensive walls, not suggestions.

If you don't build them, work will build itself into every available hour.


2. Audit Every Digital Leash

Ask yourself:

  • Do I really need work email on my phone?
  • Do I really need notifications after hours?
  • Do I really need Slack alerts on weekends?
  • Do I really need to check messages during vacation?

Most people discover the answer is no.

The expectation often exists more in their imagination than reality.

And when it is real?

At least you know exactly what system you're dealing with.


3. Take Small Acts of Rebellion Seriously

Don't underestimate tiny acts.

An uninterrupted lunch.

A fully disconnected evening.

A weekend without email.

A vacation day with the laptop turned off.

These are no longer ordinary actions.

They are acts of resistance against a culture that normalizes permanent availability.


4. Build a Life Bigger Than Your Job

Many workers become trapped because work gradually consumes their identity.

When work becomes who you are, every boundary feels threatening.

Develop parallel identities:

  • Gardener
  • Volunteer
  • Artist
  • Athlete
  • Parent
  • Reader
  • Community organizer
  • Musician
  • Hiker

The more dimensions your life has, the less power any employer holds over your sense of self.


5. Practice Economic Resilience

The greatest source of workplace fear is dependency.

People tolerate extraordinary demands because losing income feels catastrophic.

Building resilience means:

  • Reducing debt where possible.
  • Growing emergency savings.
  • Learning practical skills.
  • Strengthening community ties.
  • Creating multiple income streams when feasible.

Every layer of resilience reduces the leverage fear has over you.


6. Normalize Collective Boundaries

Individual resistance matters.

Collective resistance matters more.

Workplaces change when groups establish norms:

  • No emails after certain hours.
  • No meetings during vacation.
  • No expectation of instant responses.
  • Actual coverage during absences.

Burnout is often framed as an individual weakness.

In reality, it is frequently a collective organizational failure.


7. Reclaim Rest as a Necessity

Rest is not laziness.

Rest is maintenance.

Nobody criticizes a machine for needing oil.

Nobody shames a phone for needing a recharge.

Nobody expects an engine to run continuously forever.

Yet millions of workers are expected to operate under exactly those conditions.

The absurdity becomes obvious when viewed from outside the system.

Humans require recovery.

That isn't ideology.

It's biology.


Final Thought

The most frightening number isn't 40 percent of workers leaving vacation unused.

It isn't 60 percent reporting burnout.

It isn't 81 percent feeling at risk.

The most frightening number is harder to calculate.

It's the number of people who have quietly accepted this as normal.

A society where workers are afraid to stop working is not a society suffering from a time-management problem.

It's a society suffering from a meaning problem.

The hamster wheel keeps accelerating because everyone is told the next sprint will finally bring relief.

But the wheel was never designed to stop.

Adaptation begins the moment you realize that.

And then step off.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, June 21 2026

The Refurbished Revolution: Why Europe Is Falling in Love With Used Electronics — and What It Means for the Future How rising prices, resour...