Nope. USB-C has always been a less stable connection than Lightning. USB-C connections get looser over time. And it certainly is the EU’s fault. Now there will be hundreds of tons of Lightning cables dumped into landfills because of them.
Depends on your use I suppose considering that I have multiple devices that work flawlessly with USB-C and while possibly Lightning feels that little bit more solid while in the port, that's less the case when it gets filled with lint and the connection barely works until a clean out is needed - that doesn't happen with USB-C whose port hole is a much narrower profile (and I've never had to clean said port on devices I've had for years, to be fair none are pocket devices). Next, why generalise in saying that 100 of tonnes of lightning cables will be dumped because of this - 100's of tonnes are undoubtedly thrown in all the time from just being faulty, broken, frayed, yellowed, cheap knockoffs that don't work and possibly 100's of tonnes are recycled too. Proprietary ANYTHING should be principally thrown away (preferably recycled OR never built in the first place) BECAUSE its usually a way for a company to create lock-in, to continue revenue just for them and to suit exclusively the company and NOT its users (if only their licensed cable works with their device, its only them that makes the money and they price fix this too and make repairs generally more expensive) For example ask yourself this question; when Apple went from 30 pin to Lightning, how many 30 pins were thrown in landfill or sit in a drawer doing nothing, un-recycled. Plenty - did you care, did Apple care ? I doubt it. There will always be some waste from change - we should aim to minimise it and a standardised cable goes WAY further in doing this than a bunch of proprietary cable types. A standardised cable that's old can still give life to a totally different device that's still compatible with it.
Simplifying to one single cable type that works well is unbelievably more logical than having 5/6 proprietary cables for all of your different devices that you use regularly, for example if you tend to charge in multiple places - at home, in your car, at the office, on the train you might buy multiple cables for all those places to have one there in case you needed one. Now imagine you had 3/4 different devices all with proprietary socket types - you'd have to have 12 - 16 cables in all of those places if you want an easy life, each place would have a spaghetti of a mess of things (and if one broke you couldn't just another). Lets keep going, your iDevice is dead and its cable type is Lightning and you ask a friend with an Android if they have a Lightning cable - clearly they wont and your device will remain dead. You might say "they might ask me for a USB-C cable and I won't have one either" but in this case, ask yourself what's more abundant - Lightning or USB-C chargers (Lightning charges iPhones, AirPods and that's it, USB-C charges almost EVERYTHING else - MacBooks, phones, headphones, iPads, routers, cameras, e-cigarettes, desk Christmas trees, LED's, fans etc.) and well there's your answer. I shouldn't have to point this out here but if you have an iPad from the last few years you're using USB-C, a MacBook Air, Pro from the last few years - its USB-C. The problem isn't the EU, its Apple's silly line-up of inconsistent devices - Apple's own product decisions show how silly this is.