Regulations: waste batteries
Guidance for manufacturers, importers, distributors and retailers.
Overview
In the United Kingdom (UK) batteries and accumulators are regulated to help protect the environment through the Waste Batteries and Accumulators Regulations 2009 (as amended) – the underpinning legislation:
- making it compulsory to collect/take back and recycle batteries and accumulators
- preventing batteries and accumulators from being incinerated or dumped in landfill sites
What is covered
Automotive battery
An automotive battery is of any size or weight and used for one of the following:
- starting or as ignition power in a road vehicle engine
- to power lighting in a road vehicle
Industrial battery
An industrial battery or battery pack is of any size or weight, with one of the following characteristics:
- designed exclusively for industrial or professional uses
- used as a source of power for propulsion in an electric vehicle or a ‘hybrid’ vehicle
- unsealed but not an automotive battery
- sealed but not a portable battery
Portable battery
A portable battery or battery pack:
- is sealed
- is not an automotive or industrial battery
- can be hand-carried by an average natural person without difficulty
Extent of obligation
The manufacturer or importer that first places batteries on the UK market – including those in products – is classed as the producer and is therefore responsible for compliance if the business has a UK presence. This provision extends to overseas companies that are or should be registered with Companies House.
The only exception is the collection of portable batteries - UK distributors and retailers that sell or supply more than 32 kg of batteries a year must provide a take back service.
How to comply
The specific obligations in relation to waste batteries depend on their type, but all require registration with the appropriate environmental regulator via the National Packaging Waste Database.
Producers – manufacturers and importers – must record the tonnage and chemistry of the batteries they place on the market and provide this information annually via the National Packaging Waste Database.
In addition:
- producers of automotive batteries must collect waste automotive batteries for free from their final holders, such as garages and scrapyards
- producers of industrial batteries must take back waste industrial batteries for free from end users, if they supply them with new batteries and in certain other circumstances
- producers of portable batteries that place more than 1 tonne a year on the market must join a Battery Compliance Scheme (BCS), which handles the registration process for them
The guiding principles of the various arrangements are that all waste batteries are processed by an Approved Battery Treatment Operator (ABTO) or an Approved Battery Exporter (ABE) and that producers pay for their collection, treatment and recycling.
Finally, distributors and retailers that sell or supply more than 32 kg of batteries a year must participate in the take back scheme. This involves providing a free collection point for waste portable batteries at their premises and arranging their transport to an ABTO or ABE, usually through a BCS.
The role of the Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS)
OPSS has been appointed by Defra to enforce the regulations in the UK in relation to the:
- compliance of producers of automotive and industrial batteries
- take back scheme for distributors and retailers
Other aspects of the regulations are enforced by the Environment Agency and its equivalents in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Where to find out more
Waste Batteries and Accumulators Regulations 2009
Waste batteries: wider battery producer responsibilities
Waste batteries: portable battery distributor and retailer responsibility
Batteries and Accumulators (Placing on the Market) Regulations 2008
Regulations: batteries and accumulators
National Packaging Waste Database
Contact us
If you have a specific enquiry about compliance or wish to contact us regarding suspected non-compliance please email [email protected].
Alternatively you can contact our helpdesk on 0121 345 1201.
Or in writing to:
Office for Product Safety and Standards
4th Floor Cannon House
18 The Priory Queensway
Birmingham
B4 6BS
United Kingdom
Updates to this page
Published 8 March 2017Last updated 1 January 2021 + show all updates
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Updated at the end of the transition period to reflect minor amendments to the regulations, which do not impact on how to comply.
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EU Exit Update
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First published.