First launched in 1979, Ikea’s budget-friendly Billy Bookcase is one of the most popular pieces of furniture in the world. Having sold over 160 million units over the past 43 years, you’ve seen it everywhere from college dorms to pricey homes.
Launching in Asia this July but in 2024 everywhere else, the new Billy will get rid of the pesky nails that attach its back panel, replacing them with pop-in snap fittings. Anyone who’s built a piece of budget furniture will appreciate the upgrade, as hammering nails into thin sheets of wood is always tenuous. The upgrade will also come in handy during a move, as the lack of nails allows the Billy to be disassembled and reassembled for transit. Ikea also notes that it will make the Billy easier to repair, because if one piece is damaged, it’s easier to change it out.
“The veneer used in the current Billy comes with a higher layer of acrylic lacquer than the coating of paper. In general, we will not use polyurethane for the new Billy, but another synthetic coating combined with electro beam technology for curing, which is much more energy-efficient,” a spokesperson writes. Though even as the new Billy eliminates some plastic—by wrapping its foil paper around the shelf fronts, replacing plastic guards that currently protect its edges—Ikea is still coating its entire wood product in plastic to do its job.
To further complicate the equation, I’d also note that most wood veneers have to be dried out in high temperature ovens, while neither producing nor attaching foil papers requires that much heat. As Ikea mentions above, its new curing process will be saving energy with each new Billy made, lowering its carbon footprint indirectly. Furthermore, being able to move and repair the Billy more easily will allow this iconic piece of furniture to last longer before people toss it out. And if that foil paper is more durable than veneer, as Ikea claims, then the extra use of plastic should only further enhance the Billy’s lifecycle!
Which is all to say, sustainability is always more complicated than it first appears, because swapping out any one component of a product comes with a new cost. And at the scale Ikea operates—a company that uses 1% of the world’s lumber supply—the tiniest of costs truly add up. I just hope they add up to enough.
We have updated this story to reflect comments from Ikea.
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