Battery Recycling – Small Objects, Big Problem
Battery Recycling – Small Objects, Big Problem Batteries are one of those things we barely notice until something stops working. The remote fails, the kitchen scales go blank, the torch gives up during a power cut, and suddenly we are rummaging in the “useful drawer” for replacements. But once the old batteries are dead, what happens next matters far more than most people realise. In the UK, batteries should not just be chucked into the bin, because when they are crushed in waste lorries or sorting plants they can cause dangerous fires. Campaigns run by Material Focus and recycling bodies keep repeating the same message for a reason: binned batteries are a genuine fire risk. That is especially true now because so many everyday gadgets contain lithium-ion batteries. They are in phones, laptops, power tools, toothbrushes, toys, headphones, e-bikes and a growing mountain of small rechargeable devices. Some batteries are obvious and easy to remove. Others are hidden inside products...