The Scotsman

Scotland to host UK’S first dedicated plant for recycling batteries

- By ILONA AMOS

The UK’S first dedicated battery recycling plant is being set up in Ayrshire and will have the potential to process the country’s entire battery waste.

The new centre, at Kilwinning, will be able to handle 20,000 tonnes of batteries each year.

It means the UK could potentiall­y stop shipping used batteries abroad, cutting the cost and environmen­tal footprint of dealing with spent batteries.

A wide range of metals are used in batteries. Mercury, lead and cadmium are considered the most problemati­c to dispose of and batteries made with these are classified as hazardous waste.

When batteries end up in landfill, the metals can leach out and contaminat­e the surroundin­g ground, while burning them pollutes the air.

Equipment costing more than £300,000 will be installed at the Scottish site in the next few weeks, allowing sorting and shredding work to begin in November.

Resource-efficiency specialist Ecosurety and the UK arm of internatio­nal recycling solutions firm Belmont Trading are behind the scheme.

Damian Lambkin, head of innovation at Ecosurety, said: “This partnershi­p means the UK could potentiall­y stop sending batteries abroad for recycling, reducing the additional environmen­tal impacts of shipping tens of thousands of tonnes of potentiall­y hazardous waste across the sea to northern Europe every year.

“It is also a big win for producers, who will not have to cover the additional cost burdens of sending spent batteries overseas.

“This is proof that the UK waste and recycling industry can find its own innovative solutions to our waste resourcing issues through partnershi­p working.”

Recycling advisers have welcomed the new plant.

A spokeswoma­n for Zero Waste Scotland said: “We know that by keeping products and materials in use for longer, and by recycling them at end of life, we can keep them out of landfill and therefore help the environmen­t.

“But what this news shows is that by recycling effectivel­y we can also generate investment and create new jobs, which is great news for Scotland.

“As a nation we are working towards ambitious targets on recycling: with 70 per cent of waste recycled or prepared for re-use and no more than five per cent of all waste to go to landfill by 2025.

“The news that we’ll soon be able to reprocess batteries on our own shores will help us move closer towards that vision, as well as generating benefits for both our economy and the environmen­t.”

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