Woolworths to make battery recycling easier with national network of 1,000 collection bins

Woolworths

Friday, 23 April 2021: Woolworths customers will soon be able to recycle used batteries and mobile phones during their regular supermarket visit as the retailer rolls out new collection units nationwide.

Every Woolworths supermarket will offer customers a convenient place to recycle batteries across hundreds of Australian communities to help keep them out of landfill.

It comes as Australian battery recycling rates lag behind other advanced economies, where collection has traditionally been more accessible. Australia currently recycles around 10 per cent of typical handheld household batteries compared to around 40 per cent in the UK and Germany.

Starting in Victoria next week, the progressive rollout will continue in New South Wales in May, with the recycling units to be available in all 1,000 Woolworths supermarkets by August.

Once the rollout is complete, Woolworths will offer the largest network of battery collection units in Australia and expects to collect up to two million batteries a month based on the volumes collected during trials at selected supermarkets late last year.

Woolworths Supermarkets Head of Sustainability, Adrian Cullen said: “We’re working towards a better tomorrow by reducing our own environmental footprint, while also making it easier for our customers to do the same.

“One way we can have a positive impact is through initiatives like our new battery recycling units, which make sustainability and recycling part of a regular routine for the millions of customers who shop with us weekly.

“Often with the best of intentions, people can hold on to their used batteries at home, with the plan of eventually recycling them.

“By offering customers a convenient place to drop off batteries and phones as part of their regular weekly shop, not only can we help prevent batteries going to landfill, but also reduce at home stockpiles which can be a safety risk.”

The recycling program is operated in partnership with battery recycler Ecobatt. It will collect and process the batteries and phones – splitting the batteries into various materials for recycling and sending the remaining mobile phone components to Mobile Muster for specialised recycling.

The move comes as the Federal Government announces additional funding for the Battery Stewardship Council to support its Battery Product Stewardship Scheme, of which Woolworths is a member. The industry-led scheme was established last year to support local recycling capacity and safe lifecycle management of these common household items.

Federal Minister for the Environment, Sussan Ley said: “Our funding will support the Battery Stewardship Council to build a network of partner organisations and collection points, from supermarkets to libraries and office suppliers, where consumers can take their used batteries, deposit them safely and have the confidence that they will be recycled.

“Convenience is often one of the key elements to changing consumer behaviour, so it is wonderful to see Woolworths providing their customers drop off points for used batteries.”

While used batteries can leak chemicals into landfill, they possess a number of valuable components that can be recycled for use in new products, contributing to a circular economy where waste is recognised as a resource.

Metals like copper, aluminium and steel can be recovered from batteries and have many potential uses, including in manufacturing infrastructure and mechanical parts. Alkaline batteries are the most common type collected and, once extracted, a significant component can safely be used in fertilisers.

The battery and mobile phone recycling units will join the REDcycle soft plastics collection bins available in every Woolworths store. This offers communities a recycling hub for household waste that can’t be recycled in most curbside council bins. Since 2017, Woolworths has collected 900 million pieces of soft plastic from customers through the REDcycle program, which repurposes plastic waste into new products like outdoor furniture and fittings in Woolworths’ own stores.

/Public Release.