Battery Recycling in the City of Greater Geraldton area - Planet Ark Recycling Near You

Batteries

Batteries should never be put in your household recycling or garbage bin. Australia has a national recycling scheme for batteries with thousands of recycling locations available across the country.

Warning!

Batteries should never be put in your recycling or waste bin. Rechargeable batteries and lithium-ion batteries are hazardous and could produce sparks that may start a fire in the trucks or recycling facility. This includes batteries in laptops, mobile phones, power tools and cameras. Place sticky tape around battery terminals to prevent fires (scroll down for more information). 

GeraldtonWA

40

WA

Batteries - Single Use

Batteries - Rechargeable

List

Map

Coles Group

Cnr Chapman Rd & View St, Geraldton

44.6km

Tidy Up

21 Hammond Rd. (access from gate off Spencer St), Cockburn Central

Tidy Up offers a collection service through our fleet of 8 cubic metre trucks for all sorts of waste materials to be transported to either a resource recyclers, a licensed disposal site, our Cockburn Central holding yard, or our salvage store. We offer an alternative to hiring bins or trailers for your rubbish removal needs.

Western Australia Pickup

Southern E-waste & Computer Recycling

, Byford

Southern E-waste & Computer Recycling provides a FREE service in pick-up and removal of e-waste and computers in the metropolitan region of Perth, limiting the amount of e-waste going to landfill. We service both residences and businesses, and can also provide physical data destruction for computer devices.

Western Australia Pickup

RecycleSmart

Level 8/11 York St, Sydney NSW 2000, Sydney

About RecycleSmart RecycleSmart is a pioneering startup that started in Sydney, with a bold mission to simplify recycling. Our "Power Pickup" service provides on-demand doorstep collection for over 100 challenging recyclable materials, including soft plastics, e-waste, textiles, batteries, and more. Serving individuals, businesses & councils in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Canberra, Adelaide and Perth, RecycleSmart has diverted 900,000 kilograms of resources from landfills. Each category undergoes a unique recycling process. We partner with a number of amazing recycling partners that help recycle the items. The Power Pickup service also extends benefits to councils as well as businesses of all sizes. Over 1000+ business accounts created so far, including prominent names like Canva, WeWork, John Holland, Williams Fashion Logistics, and Comsol.

Western Australia Pickup

Australia’s national product stewardship scheme for battery recycling is called B-cycle. This program has partnered with approximately 100 organisations across Australia to provide recycling drop-off points for the public. Visit B-cycle for a full list of recycling drop-off points.

Aldi supermarkets offer a free battery recycling service at all their Australian stores. Any brand of AA, AAA, C, D and 9V batteries (both rechargeable and non-rechargeable) are accepted. Simply drop your used batteries into the dedicated bins in store. For other services and for options for different battery types (e.g. buttons and 12 volts) see below.

Battery World has a recycling program with collection points at most stores (some stores in WA do not accept batteries for recycling). Check with your local store to find out which types of batteries are accepted. 

Bunnings has a recycling program for batteries including batteries from power tools. The recycling unit is located at the front of each store. Handheld batteries are accepted including AA, AAA, C, D, 9V, 6V and button batteries.

Coles is rolling out battery recycling units in their stores over the coming months. Check directly with your store to see if they have a recycling unit. Various types of household batteries are accepted including AA, AAA, C, D, 6V, 9V, button batteries, rechargeable batteries, and batteries that can be easily removed from electrical products like cameras and power tools. 

Woolworths supermarkets have battery and mobile phone collection points in store.

Officeworks is no longer accepting batteries at in-store recycling units. Some stores, however, may still accept mobile phones and laptops.

How to tape batteries to prevent fires

Even dead batteries have some residual charge, so it is very important to place sticky tape around the battery ‘terminal’ before recycling them. A battery terminal is the electrical connection point of the battery. They are located in different areas depending on the type of battery (at both ends of regular batteries, for example). 

HOW TO RECYCLE BATTERIES AT WORK

Workplaces and businesses can register for a safe and secure recycling collection box through Batteries 4 Planet Ark. The program includes a pick-up service when the box is full. 

Your workplace can also search Business Recycling for recycling options including drop-off and pick-up services.

WHY SHOULD I RECYCLE MY BATTERIES? 

There are a wide range of battery types, many of which contain toxic metals such as cadmium, mercury and lead. Others contain valuable materials like magnesium and zinc. 

Recycling batteries keeps toxic materials out of landfill where they can contaminate the soil and groundwater. It also ensures the valuable materials in batteries are recycled into the something new, which reduces the amount of finite natural resources used in the production of new batteries. 

WHAT HAPPENS TO THE BATTERIES WHEN I RECYCLE THEM?

Batteries that are recycled are processed to recover the plastics and metals, some of which are used to manufacture new batteries.

Envirostream, Australia’s first onshore lithium, nickel metal and alkaline battery processor, is able to recover 95% of the materials in the batteries for recycling. Any steel, copper and aluminium recovered is returned to the manufacturing sector for recycling, while the active components of lithium-ion batteries (including graphite, cobalt, nickel and lithium) are used to produce a valuable product called mixed metal dust, which is used to produce new lithium-ion batteries.

DIFFERENT KINDS OF BATTERIES

Single-use batteries are usually alkaline batteries with zinc, manganese or lithium chemistry. Rechargeable batteries are commonly nickel cadmium, nickel metal hydride or lithium-ion. Rechargeable batteries are found in the same shapes and voltage as single-use batteries, as well as specifically designed for laptops, mobile phones and electronic equipment.

Buying rechargeable batteries is a great way to reduce battery waste. Each battery can be recharged up to 1000 times, saving you money and reducing pollution from discarded batteries. There are many retailers who sell battery rechargers, which conveniently take less than 15 minutes to recharge.

OTHER BATTERY RECYCLING PROGRAMS

Mobile phone batteries are accepted by MobileMuster, with thousands of recycling locations located across the country. Find recycling options for mobile phones. 

Computer batteries are accepted in some Officeworks stores. They can also be recycled through an accredited recycler of the National Television and Computer Recycling Scheme. Find recycling options for computers.

Car batteries can be recycled at many garages, transfer stations and waste management centres. Find recycling options for car batteries.

More information

To learn about Australia’s product stewardship scheme for batteries, including more information on how to tape and safely store batteries, visit B-cycle.