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Based on the last time I tried to change my phone's battery: Replaceable batteries only make a difference if there are actually new batteries being made for your model, a replacement battery that's been stored in a warehouse for about as long as your phone is old doesn't help. For increasing your phone's lifespan anyway, you can still use a second battery to increase the time between charging on a day-to-day basis, if replacing the battery is something easy you could do every day without damaging the phone.
Might depend on the specific battery tech, though.
Per the article, there must be replacement batteries available for at least five years after the end of the product being available on the market. I don't think it would make much sense to keep tonnes of batteries in storage for so long. Presumably battery manufacturing would therefore have to continue over time. Maybe device manufacturers will try to share battery designs across device models so they don't need so many manufacturing lines?
Would be great if it means that I could swap out my device's battery after a few years and the new battery takes advantage of the improvements over that time.
What if you, the phone manufacturer, want to sell more phones? I assume they only need to store enough batteries to be able to meet the actual demand, which won't be high if the replacement batteries are crap or if it's prohibitively hard to change the batteries as an end user, or if most of the phones break before the battery.
I've had multiple phones with replaceable batteries. As long as the phones were popular models, replacement batteries were widely available from both the OEM and 3rd parties. Manufacturing dates were usually within 6 months or so.
Once this goes into effect and there's widespread demand for replacement batteries I suspect their will be no problem with supply.
Also, it will make economic sense for phone manufacturers to have as few battery models as possible. So, it's possible that there are some pretty standard batteries. It's also the case that batteries that sit in a warehouse for years are still better than batteries that have been discharged and recharged repeatedly.
I've paid a technician to replace the non-replaceable battery in one iPhone and in one iPad. Even though Apple doesn't officially make batteries replaceable, if you are willing to pay for it, you can get a new battery and extend the life of your device by a couple of years. I imagine that will only get easier once the batteries are actually user replaceable.
That was the case with batteries in "olden times". Nowadays some manufacturers (looking at you, Apple) have added cryptographic security to replacement parts. In a world like that it wouldn't be crazy that the phone could detect and reject 3rd party batteries.