Brussels - In spite of the transposition of the 2006 European Battery Directive in almost all the Member States, only 27,600 tons of used portable batteries originating from these countries have been processed in 2008 by the members of EBRA (European Battery Recycling Association). They included 22,800 tons of primary batteries (including lithium primary and button cells) and 4,800 tons of portable rechargeable batteries (Ni-Cd, Ni-MH, Li-ion).
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The impact of the transposition of the directive - the deadline was October 2008 - is not sensible for the moment. In September 2009, all the EU Member-States have fully implemented the 2006 Battery Directive in time (the deadline was the 26 September 2008) except the four countries France, Czech Republic, Greece and Slovakia.
Compared to the 190,000 tons of portable batteries marketed each year in Europe, the 27 600 tons recycled by EBRA members in 2008 correspond to a European EBRA ratio of 14,5 percent in average. Based on producers organisations or authorities statistics, +/- 8 000 tons of portables batteries have been additionally collected in Europe and processed by non-Ebra members or disposed of. It is the case in Germany, in Italy, in the Netherlands, in Poland, in France or in Spain…Globally the quantities collected in Europe are equivalent to 35,000 tons.
EBRA regrets to see some used batteries still collected for landfilling in 2008 and highlights the producers and the Member-States to guarantee that all the used batteries collected are processed with high standards: the traceability of the pollutants through IPPC, registration to Reach of the recovered metals put on the market, recycling efficiencies target (as soon as the methodology is defined).
Seven Member-States have still reached the first Directive target of 25 percent for 2012 - Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Luxemburg, Sweden and The Netherlands – and six others could reach it on time: Denmark, Portugal, Greece, Ireland, Spain and Latvia. The situation is more questionable in the three other «historical» Member-States : Finland, Italy, UK. For 11 new EU Member-States, collection has just started and the quantities collected in 2008 are still very low.
According to EBRA, “the first collection target of 25 percent to be achieved in 2012 will be very difficult to be reached in some countries”. 25 percent of collection rate in the 27 Member-States corresponds to the collection of 50,000 tons of used portable batteries.
So EBRA urged the governments where the 2006 Battery Directive has been recently implemented to intensify their efforts for achieving the mandatory collection rate of 25 percent on schedule (2012).
More figures and tables can be seen at EBRA paper. Quelle: European Battery Recycling Association (EBRA)
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Artikel vom: 03.09.2009 10:50
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