Battery fires from discarded electronics on the rise, study warns

10 May 2024, 00:04

A man using a smartphone
Battery fires on the rise. Picture: PA

Recycling campaigners have urged the public to properly recycle their old electronic devices.

Fire chiefs and recycling campaigners have warned that fires caused by discarded batteries in electricals are on the rise, causing damage and spikes in air pollution levels.

According to a study by Material Focus, which leads the Recycle Your Electricals campaign, battery fires in bin lorries and at waste sites have risen by more than 70% since 2022, with more than 1,200 estimated to have occurred last year.

It said that the steep rise in the number of portable electrical items containing lithium-ion batteries being bought and used by the public was leading to an increased risk of fires, with the study indicating that 1.6 billion batteries were thrown away last year, including 1.1 billion containing lithium-ion batteries.

Found inside most common portable electronics, including laptops, phones, tablets, earpods and vapes, lithium-ion batteries can be crushed or damaged if not recycled and instead end up in bin lorries or waste sites – which can lead to fires.

Alongside the campaigners, the National Fire Chiefs Council noted that lithium-ion battery fires can be particularly dangerous to the public, waste site workers and firefighters because of the risk of chemical exposure and reigniting as they can generate their own oxygen.

Mark Andrews, waste and recycling fires lead for the National Fire Chiefs Council, said: “Fires involving waste have always been challenging but lithium-ion batteries add significantly to this by creating unknown and unpredictable risks.

“These fires can be explosive and spread rapidly with the risk of reignition and toxic gasses a risk to firefighters. These incidents also tie up large numbers of finite, fire service resources and firefighters to fully control and extinguish the fire creating further risks to the community.”

With the study indicating that incidents of battery fire are on the rise, Recycle Your Electricals executive director, Scott Butler, urged the public to consider the consequences of not properly disposing of electricals and batteries.

“With more and more products containing lithium-ion batteries, and battery fires on the rise, it’s vital that we stop these fires and reduce the air pollution impact that they have on our local communities and the dangers they present to firefighters and waste officers,” he said.

“We are also throwing away some of the most precious materials on the planet which are vital to our economy.

“We are calling on everyone to make sure that they never bin and always recycle their electricals and their batteries. Just search recycle your electricals to find your nearest drop off point.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

An iPhone 16 display

Apple’s UK engineering teams have ‘doubled in size in five years’

A-level students sat at desks for an exam inside a sports hall

AI could be used to help generate exam question papers, Ofqual chief says

Bafta has released the full longlist of 58 games that have been voted as the best titles of 2024 (PA)

Call Of Duty: Black Ops 6 among titles on longlist for 2025 Bafta Game Awards

Luke Littler gesturing to the crowd

Luke Littler and Oasis among top-trending Google searches in UK in 2024

A ChapGPT logo on a smartphone

OpenAI launches video generation tool Sora

An Amazon Echo Show device on a wall

Taylor Swift and Bitcoin named among the most popular Alexa queries of 2024

The Chat GPT website

OpenAI unveils new 200 dollars-a-month ChatGPT Pro subscription

The lights on the front panel of a broadband internet router

Full-fibre broadband reaches nearly 70% of UK homes – Ofcom

UK trials first interactive public breathalyser to curb drink-driving during festive season.

UK pub debuts first interactive breathalyser to help tackle drink-driving during festive season

A child using a mobile phone

Parents urged to be vigilant about children’s online safety over Christmas

Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool

Data from hospital cyber attack ‘could be released before NHS can investigate’

British singer Charli XCX dressed in a black dress and dark sunglasses at the Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition Preview Party 2023 – London

Brat summer and ‘demure’ make-up feature in TikTok’s top trends of 2024

A woman using her mobile phone

Virgin Media O2 expands National Databank access to all O2 stores

Exclusive
Ministers are looking at relaxing the Tory government's TikTok ban in a bid to woo younger voters online, LBC understands.

Ministers eye TikTok comeback to reach younger voters despite security concerns

Telegram Messenger stock

Telegram to work with internet watchdog on child sexual abuse material crackdown

The GCHQ building in Cheltenham (GCHQ)

‘Broader and deeper’ online risk to UK from criminals and state-backed hackers