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10/31/2018 11:35

EU collection rate: More than half of all batteries disappear

Alexa Hännicke Öffentlichkeit und Kommunikation
Öko-Institut e. V. - Institut für angewandte Ökologie

    Poor collection rates for portable batteries, inadequate targets for lithium-ion batteries and a lack of incentives for those responsible to collect more waste batteries. An Oeko-Institut led study – in collaboration with Trinomics – for the European Commission reveals several weaknesses in the current Batteries Directive.

    An outdated Directive – poor collection rates

    To evaluate the Directive, the Oeko-Institut looked at the quantities of portable batteries collected in all 28 Member States of the EU. This showed that only around half of all Member States were achieving the prescribed quota of 45 per cent. “The flipside of this is that more than half of all batteries are not being collected or recycled at all”, says Dr Hartmut Stahl, a researcher at the Oeko-Institut and lead author of the study.

    Into household waste instead of to the recycling centre

    Every year, according to the Oeko-Institut, around 35,000 tonnes of batteries end up in household waste across Europe, meaning that precious resources are lost. At the same time the risk to the environment increases because of the potential leakage of hazardous substances such as cadmium and lead. Getting consumers involved by means of better information and targeted collection campaigns is an important way forward. The aim is to boost collection volumes by extracting more batteries from waste electrical appliances. Along with this, appliances should again be designed to make batteries more easily removable.

    The megatrend for lithium-ion batteries – a blind spot

    Electric cars, drones, fork-lift trucks – even robot vacuum cleaners have them: lithium-ion batteries impact more and more areas of our lives. New applications, new types of batteries and new recycling technologies are being constantly developed, with the result that the EU Batteries Directive of 2006 has been left behind. “Despite the increasing importance of lithium-ion batteries in new technologies such as electric bikes, there are no specific collection and separate recycling targets for them”, says Stahl. “A revised Directive needs to be put in place – such as one with ambitious targets for key elements such as lithium and cobalt.”


    Contact for scientific information:

    Dr Hartmut Stahl
    Senior Researcher in the
    Resources & Transport Division
    Oeko-Institut (Institute for Applied Ecology)
    Darmstadt office
    Phone: +49 6151 8191-180
    Email: h.stahl@oeko.de


    Original publication:

    “Evaluation of the Directive 2006/66/EC on batteries and accumulators and waste batteries and accumulators”: study by the Oeko-Institut in collaboration with Trinomics B.V. (https://www.oeko.de/en/publications/p-details/study-in-support-of-evaluation-of-...)


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    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, all interested persons
    Energy, Environment / ecology, Information technology
    transregional, national
    Research results, Science policy
    English


     

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