Samsung plans to sell refurbished Galaxy Note 7
Samsung's Note 7s were permanently scrapped in
October following a global recall, roughly two months from the launch
of the near-$900 devices, after some phones self-combusted.
Tech giant Samsung Electronics Co Ltd said late on Monday that it
plans to sell refurbished versions of the Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, the
model pulled from markets last year due to fire-prone batteries.
Samsung's
Note 7s were permanently scrapped in October following a global recall,
roughly two months from the launch of the near-$900 devices, after some
phones self-combusted.
A subsequent probe found manufacturing
problems in batteries supplied by two different companies - Samsung SDI
Co Ltd and Amperex Technology Ltd.
Analysis from Samsung and
independent researchers found no other problems in the Note 7 devices
except the batteries, raising speculation that Samsung will recoup some
of its losses by selling refurbished Note 7s
A person familiar
with the matter told Reuters in January that it was considering the
possibility of selling refurbished versions of the device or reusing
some parts.
Samsung's announcement that revamped Note 7s will go back
on sale, however, surprised some with the timing - just days before it
launches its new S8 smartphone on Wednesday in the United States, its
first new premium phone since the debacle last year.
Samsung, under huge pressure to turn its image around after the
burning battery scandal, had previously not commented on its plans for
recovered phones.
"Regarding the Galaxy Note 7 devices as refurbished phones or rental phones, applicability is dependent upon
consultations with regulatory authorities and carriers as well as due
consideration of local demand," Samsung said in a statement, adding the
firm will pick the markets and release dates for refurbished Note 7s
accordingly.
The company estimated it took a $5.5 billion profit
hit over three-quarters from the Note 7's troubles. It had sold more
than 3 million Note 7s before taking the phones off the market.
The
company also plans to recover and use or sell reusable components such
as chips and camera modules and extract rare metals such as copper,
gold, nickel and silver from Note 7 devices it opts not to sell as refurbished products.
The firm had been under pressure from
environment rights group Greenpeace and others to come up with
environmentally friendly ways to deal with the recovered Note 7s.
Greenpeace said in a separate statement on Monday that it welcomed
Samsung's decision and the firm should carry out its plans in a verifiable manner.
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