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Once the battery dies on most electric toothbrushes, it’s time to put it in the trash. But not with the new Suri.

This startup redesigned the electric toothbrush to make it repairable and recyclable

[Photo: Suri]

BY Adele Peters3 minute read

When the rechargeable battery wears out inside a typical electric toothbrush, it can’t be replaced—which means the entire, otherwise functional toothbrush ends up in a landfill (or, if someone is particularly responsible, an e-waste recycling facility). But a new modular electric toothbrush, designed with sustainability in mind, can be repaired, so it lasts as long as possible.

From the London-based startup SURI (for Sustainable Rituals), the toothbrush has a body made from easily-recyclable aluminum rather than plastic. The plant-based plastic heads can be sent back for recycling in either the U.K. or the U.S., or, in some cases, industrially composted. And the electronic components inside are designed to be replaced if a repair is needed.

[Photo: Suri]
Cofounders Mark Rushmore and Gyve Safavi previously worked at Proctor & Gamble, and kept thinking about the fact that billions of toothbrushes, both manual and electric, are thrown out each year. With manual toothbrushes, “we found that many people actually think toothbrushes are recyclable,” Safavi says. “But in reality, they’re not. They’re made from multiple different types of materials—polypropylene, silicone, and nylon bristles. While the materials themselves could be recycled, when we went to recycling plants, they said, ‘Yeah, these could be recycled, but we don’t have the time. And it just costs too much money to recycle them.'”

[Photo: Suri]
In the landfill, they don’t break down. Electric toothbrushes can pose even more of a challenge, since lithium ion batteries can leach pollutants into the soil and groundwater. The materials in the battery could have value if recycled, but they often aren’t. The battery itself is welded inside the plastic handle.

[Photo: Suri]
Most electric toothbrushes are white labeled, the company says, meaning that manufacturers make the same product for multiple brands, with different labels. But the startup wanted to start from scratch. By redesigning the inner components, the designers were able to shrink the size of the handle to roughly a third of a traditional electric toothbrush, though it still can vibrate as powerfully. (A standard electric toothbrush, they note,looks basically like it did in the 1960s.) They also eliminated features that consumers said they rarely used, like Bluetooth and a charging light, and those changes help the battery last a month or more on a single charge; by charging less often, the battery will last longer.

[Photo: Suri]
Manufacturing was a challenge because factories had never taken on a similar job. “When we talked to factories, they said, ‘Why would you want to repair a toothbrush? You could just sell customers a new one,'” Safavi says. They talked to more than 20 factories before finding one willing to do the work—including working with new materials, like plant-based castor oil to make the bristles.

At large consumer-product companies, “sustainability is often an afterthought,” he says. “You design a product with certain criteria, and then you’re like, Okay, now, how do we make it sustainable? . . . We wanted to start a business that was founded on design, performance, and sustainability on an even setting, rather than sort of trying to retrofit something in afterwards.”

If the rechargeable battery dies, the toothbrush can be sent back to the company to have a new battery swapped in. A future version of the brush will likely ship with instructions for consumers to replace the battery themselves.

While they were working on the product development, each of the cofounders also separately became fathers. “There’s something about becoming a dad that really focuses the mind on the world that we’re bringing our children into, and to be able to look them in the eye and say what we did to try and, like, help in some small way,” says Rushmore. “Clearly the challenges we have ahead in the climate are enormous. But if we can do something toward making things a bit better, then that felt like a worthwhile mission.”

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Adele Peters is a senior writer at Fast Company who focuses on solutions to climate change and other global challenges, interviewing leaders from Al Gore and Bill Gates to emerging climate tech entrepreneurs like Mary Yap. She contributed to the bestselling book "Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century" and a new book from Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies called State of Housing Design 2023 More


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