Call2Recycle is offering a bulk collection service for battery recycling called OneDrum. | Courtesy of Call2Recycle[/caption]
ERI facilities in California and Indiana will sort and ship out used batteries as part of a nationwide mixed-battery collection program from stewardship organization Call2Recycle.
The bulk collection service, called OneDrum, allows e-scrap processors, household hazardous waste collection sites and other accumulators of large amounts of batteries to ship an assortment of rechargeable and single-use batteries without conducting labor-intensive fire-prevention preparations.
Typically, to safely move scrap batteries downstream, collectors must sort them by chemistry and tape over the terminals contacts for select battery types, to present fire risks. Some batteries, particularly lithium-ion chemistries, can still hold a strong residual charge after they're disposed of. Because of that, they can trigger fires and explosions when they're damaged at e-scrap facilities - or even when they're in transit to downstream processors.
OneDrum, which was launched by Call2Recycle around Earth Day, includes a kit with the following components: Four 55-gallon drums, a pallet, a fire-prevention material called CellBlockEX and use of Call2Recycle's U.S. Department of Transportation special permit for shipping batteries. Sites will pay around $1,500 for a OneDrum kit, a sum that doesn't include shipping costs.
The pallets will travel in less-than-truckload shipments to ERI's large processing facilities in Fresno, Calif. and Plainfield, Ind., where crews will process them for downstream outlets.
"OneDrum is truly a trailblazing product, opening the door for even more innovation in the battery recycling industry and making these solutions more accessible to communities across the United States," John Shegerian, chairman and CEO of ERI, stated in a press release.
In an interview, Todd Ellis, managing director of services and solutions at Call2Recycle, explained that ERI will use sorting tables to separate the batteries from the CellBlockEX and then manually sort and prepare the batteries for shipment to downstream processors.
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Call2Recycle is offering a bulk collection service for battery recycling called OneDrum. | Courtesy of Call2Recycle[/caption]
ERI facilities in California and Indiana will sort and ship out used batteries as part of a nationwide mixed-battery collection program from stewardship organization Call2Recycle.
The bulk collection service, called OneDrum, allows e-scrap processors, household hazardous waste collection sites and other accumulators of large amounts of batteries to ship an assortment of rechargeable and single-use batteries without conducting labor-intensive fire-prevention preparations.
Typically, to safely move scrap batteries downstream, collectors must sort them by chemistry and tape over the terminals contacts for select battery types, to present fire risks. Some batteries, particularly lithium-ion chemistries, can still hold a strong residual charge after they're disposed of. Because of that, they can trigger fires and explosions when they're damaged at e-scrap facilities - or even when they're in transit to downstream processors.
OneDrum, which was launched by Call2Recycle around Earth Day, includes a kit with the following components: Four 55-gallon drums, a pallet, a fire-prevention material called CellBlockEX and use of Call2Recycle's U.S. Department of Transportation special permit for shipping batteries. Sites will pay around $1,500 for a OneDrum kit, a sum that doesn't include shipping costs.
The pallets will travel in less-than-truckload shipments to ERI's large processing facilities in Fresno, Calif. and Plainfield, Ind., where crews will process them for downstream outlets.
"OneDrum is truly a trailblazing product, opening the door for even more innovation in the battery recycling industry and making these solutions more accessible to communities across the United States," John Shegerian, chairman and CEO of ERI, stated in a press release.
In an interview, Todd Ellis, managing director of services and solutions at Call2Recycle, explained that ERI will use sorting tables to separate the batteries from the CellBlockEX and then manually sort and prepare the batteries for shipment to downstream processors.
Call2Recycle is offering a bulk collection service for battery recycling called OneDrum. | Courtesy of Call2Recycle[/caption]
ERI facilities in California and Indiana will sort and ship out used batteries as part of a nationwide mixed-battery collection program from stewardship organization Call2Recycle.
The bulk collection service, called OneDrum, allows e-scrap processors, household hazardous waste collection sites and other accumulators of large amounts of batteries to ship an assortment of rechargeable and single-use batteries without conducting labor-intensive fire-prevention preparations.
Typically, to safely move scrap batteries downstream, collectors must sort them by chemistry and tape over the terminals contacts for select battery types, to present fire risks. Some batteries, particularly lithium-ion chemistries, can still hold a strong residual charge after they're disposed of. Because of that, they can trigger fires and explosions when they're damaged at e-scrap facilities - or even when they're in transit to downstream processors.
OneDrum, which was launched by Call2Recycle around Earth Day, includes a kit with the following components: Four 55-gallon drums, a pallet, a fire-prevention material called CellBlockEX and use of Call2Recycle's U.S. Department of Transportation special permit for shipping batteries. Sites will pay around $1,500 for a OneDrum kit, a sum that doesn't include shipping costs.
The pallets will travel in less-than-truckload shipments to ERI's large processing facilities in Fresno, Calif. and Plainfield, Ind., where crews will process them for downstream outlets.
"OneDrum is truly a trailblazing product, opening the door for even more innovation in the battery recycling industry and making these solutions more accessible to communities across the United States," John Shegerian, chairman and CEO of ERI, stated in a press release.
In an interview, Todd Ellis, managing director of services and solutions at Call2Recycle, explained that ERI will use sorting tables to separate the batteries from the CellBlockEX and then manually sort and prepare the batteries for shipment to downstream processors.
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