
Several hundred thousand tonnes of industrial and portable batteries and accumulators are placed on the European market every year.
A wide range of metals are used, from mercury, lead and cadmium to nickel, copper, zinc, manganese and lithium. Disposing of the waste from these products by incineration pollutes the atmosphere and burying them in landfill sites contaminates ground-cover and water courses.
Directive 2006/66/EC of the European Parliament aims to achieve a significant reduction in the amount of hazardous substances - in particular, mercury, cadmium and lead - dumped in the environment. This should be achieved by reducing the use of these substances in batteries and accumulators and by treating and re-using the amounts that are used.
The Directive prohibits the placing on the market of certain batteries and accumulators with a proportional mercury or cadmium content above a fixed threshold. In addition, it promotes a high rate of collection and recycling of waste batteries and accumulators and improvement in the environmental performance of all parties involved in the life-cycle of batteries and accumulators, including their recycling and disposal.
The Directive applies to all types of batteries and accumulators, apart from those used in equipment to protect Member States' security or for military purposes, or in equipment designed to be sent into space. It therefore covers a wider range of products than the now repealed Directive 91/157/EEC, which applied only to batteries containing mercury, lead or cadmium, and excluded "button cells".
The Directive prohibits:
To ensure that a high proportion of spent batteries and accumulators are recycled, Member States must take whatever measures are needed (including economic instruments) to promote and maximise separate waste collections and prevent batteries and accumulators being thrown away as unsorted municipal refuse. They have to make arrangements enabling end-users to discard spent batteries and accumulators at collection points in their vicinity and have them taken back at no charge by the producers. A collection rate of at least 25% has to be achieved by 26 September 2012 and and a collection rate of 45% by 26 September 2016. Member States also have to ensure that batteries and accumulators that have been collected are treated and recycled using the best available techniques. Recycling must exclude energy recovery. As a minimum, treatment must include removal of all fluids and acids. Batteries and accumulators must be treated and stored (even if only temporarily) in sites with impermeable surfaces and weatherproof covering, or in suitable containers.
Member States must also ensure that In principle, manufacturers design their appliances to facilitate ready and safe removal of batteries and accumulators readily and safely. As a minimum, treatment must include removal of all fluids and acids.
The recycling of battery and accumulator content to produce similar products or for other purposes has to reach the following levels by 26 September 2011:
The Legislation document.
Premier Farnell's 2-page Introduction to the "new" EU Battery Directive is a sucsinct summary of the EU's ambitions to reduce the impact our dependance on numerous battery technologies has on the environment.
