The approval this Tuesday by the European Parliament of USB-C as a single charger means that all new smartphones that are marketed in member countries must incorporate it regardless of the manufacturer's brand, which means that Apple will also have to adopt it on iPhone.
Since 2012, iPhone phones have integrated their own charging port called Lightning, unlike the rest of the phones of the brands that use Android, which seek to differentiate themselves more by charging technology, increasingly faster, than by the port used, with Wide adoption of USB Type-C in recent years, even at lower and lower ranges.
The obligation to incorporate a USB type C port is expected to become effective at the end of 2024, affecting smartphones regardless of the manufacturer. This means that the new iPhones that arrive on the market by then should have adopted a port of this type that, maintaining the numbering followed until now by Apple, would correspond to the iPhone 16, presented in September of that same year.
However, this regulation still requires the final approval of the Council, and after that, the governments of the European Union will have two years to incorporate these regulations into national laws. The European Parliament itself indicates in a press release that "it will not apply to products marketed before its entry into force."
Without knowing Apple's plans yet, this means that the iPhone 16 could still arrive with a Lightning port, delaying the change of connector to the next model, iPhone 17, in 2025. But it could happen sooner. The Bloomberg analyst Mark Gurman already anticipated in May that the adoption of the USB type C port would materialize in the iPhone of 2023, a forecast in which the analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has also agreed.
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