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A solar cell on the back lets them recharge using indoor (and outdoor) light. Don't worry, there's a USB-C charging port too.
Editorial Director -- TVs and streaming
David has reviewed TVs, streaming services, streaming devices and home entertainment gear at CNET since 2002. He is an ISF certified, NIST trained calibrator and developed CNET's TV test procedure himself. Previously David wrote reviews and features for Sound & Vision magazine and eTown.com. He is known to two people on Twitter as "The Cormac McCarthy of consumer electronics."
This story is part of CES , where CNET covers the latest news on the most incredible tech coming soon.
Just about every TV remote uses batteries and they generally last a long time, but eventually you will need to replace them. In a nod to sustainability in its 2021 TVs -- and, let's face it, to utter coolness -- Samsung put rechargeable batteries and a solar cell into the remotes of its best Neo QLED TVs .
The cell is sensitive enough to recharge the clicker with the basic indoor lights in your house. The remote also has a standard USB-C port on the bottom that you can plug into any charger. Samsung says the batteries last a full year before needing to be recharged.
Samsung sells a lot of TVs and it estimates moving to rechargeable batteries will save 20 million single-use, AAA batteries from ending up in the garbage, the equivalent of 200 tons of waste.
The new clicker is also "made from recycled material," according to Samsung. It will be available in all new Neo QLED TVs for 2021, but the company didn't confirm which lower-end models ("base QLED"), if any, would receive it. It expects to have those details in 4-8 weeks.
Read more: Samsung The Frame TV slims down to mimic a painting on the wall
In another environmental-friendly move, Samsung says it's changing all of its TV boxes to so-called "eco packaging," first introduced in select 2020 televisions like The Serif . The main difference is that the cardboard has fewer images printed on it, which "greatly reduces" the amount of ink used in the manufacturing process (take it from me, TV boxes are big). The company will also encourage users to "upcycle" the boxes into something else, like, you know, a cat house.
Seen here with a 2020 Serif TV box, all of Samsung's 2021 TV boxes will use less ink for printing and be "upcycle"-friendly.