The Sustainability Lens on Laptop Choice

When evaluating laptops through a green lens, raw performance benchmarks take a back seat to questions of longevity, repairability, energy consumption, and the environmental policies of the manufacturer. The Framework Laptop and Dell XPS 13 represent two very different philosophies — here's how they compare.

At a Glance

Criterion Framework Laptop 13 Dell XPS 13
Repairability Score (iFixit) 10/10 3–5/10 (varies by model)
Upgradeable RAM Yes No (soldered)
Upgradeable Storage Yes Yes (M.2 slot)
Modular Ports Yes (expansion cards) No
Recycled Materials Partial (chassis uses some recycled aluminium) Partial (recycled content in packaging and plastics)
Manufacturer Take-Back Marketplace for used parts Dell Reconnect programme
ENERGY STAR Certified Yes Yes

Repairability: Framework Wins Clearly

The Framework Laptop was designed from the ground up to be user-serviceable. Every major component — battery, screen, keyboard, mainboard, ports — can be replaced with standard tools. iFixit awarded it a perfect repairability score. The XPS 13, while a premium build, uses soldered RAM and a tightly integrated chassis that makes repairs difficult and costly. If longevity is your priority, Framework's approach is substantially greener.

Energy Efficiency: Roughly Comparable

Both laptops use modern Intel or AMD processors with strong power management. Idle and light-load power draw is comparable between the two. Neither has a standout advantage here — both are ENERGY STAR certified and perform respectably in battery life tests for their class.

Materials and Manufacturing

Dell publishes detailed Product Carbon Footprint (PCF) data and has committed to using more recycled content across its product lines. Framework is a smaller company with less published data, but its modular design philosophy inherently reduces waste by allowing components to be replaced individually rather than discarding the whole unit.

Long-Term Value and Environmental Cost

This is where Framework's model makes the most compelling case. Because you can replace the mainboard with a newer generation while keeping the chassis, screen, and peripherals, the long-term environmental cost per year of use can be significantly lower. Dell's XPS, while well-built, is essentially a sealed unit — when something critical breaks, replacement is often the only practical option.

Our Verdict

For users who prioritise environmental impact and long-term ownership, the Framework Laptop is the stronger choice. For those who need Dell's ecosystem, enterprise support, or sleeker form factor and are committed to keeping the device well-maintained, the XPS 13 is still a reasonable, energy-efficient option — but its repairability limitations are a genuine green weakness.