| Literature DB >> 35377120 |
Md Tasbirul Islam1,2, Nazmul Huda3, Alex Baumber4, Rumana Hossain2, Veena Sahajwalla2.
Abstract
Consumer behavior is a critical consideration for the development of sustainable waste management systems, including waste batteries, which pose a serious threat to human health and the environment if disposed of improperly. This study investigates the consumers' perspective on the waste battery collection and recycling behaviors in Australia, and analyses their implications for the development of recycling schemes. The results show that, although general awareness exists among consumers about the negative impacts of improper disposal, this awareness was not reflected during the disposal of waste batteries among the participants. Insufficient knowledge about the waste battery collection points and convenience were the most important factors affecting the inappropriate disposal behavior from most of the consumers. Over 50% of participants were unaware of the collection points for waste batteries. The most-preferred battery collection systems involved a deposit return system similar to that used for bottle recycling in the state of New South Wales (NSW) or collection at supermarkets/retailers. The most preferred methods for providing an incentive to recycle batteries were "old-for-new" battery swaps, "vouchers that could be used for other items in a store," and "cash payments." Several policy implications have been highlighted from this pioneering study that could shape the future development of sustainable waste battery management systems in Australia.Entities:
Keywords: Circular economy; Consumer; Extended producer responsibility; Policy; Recycling; Spent battery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35377120 PMCID: PMC9399068 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-19681-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 5.190
Material use in various batteries, adopted from (Australian Battery Recycling Initiative 2022)
| Battery type | Acronym | Cathode material | Anode material | Electrolyte | Example recycling process/technology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alkaline-primary (single use) | Manganese dioxide | Zinc | Aqueous alkaline or potassium hydroxide | Carbothermic process for recovering high-value zinc/zinc oxide (Zn/ZnO) powder (Mukhlis et al. | |
| Lead-acid | ULAB | Lead dioxide | Lead | Sulfuric acid | Hydrometallurgical and pyrometallurgical processes (Yanamandra et al. |
| Li-Ion | Li-ion | Metal oxides of cobalt, nickel, iron, aluminum, or manganese | Carbon | Lithium salt in a solvent such as (organic, solid ceramic, ionic fluid, composites, or other types of solvent) | Mechanical treatment, pyrometallurgy, or hydrometallurgy (Sommerville et al. |
| Nickel–cadmium | NiCd | Nickel oxyhydroxide | Cadmium | - | Chemical recycling of cadmium (Saleh et al. |
| Nickel metal hydride | NiMH | Nickel oxyhydroxide | Hydrogen-absorbing alloy | Potassium hydroxide | Hydrothermal, NMP dissolving, bioleaching treatment, acid leaching (Pradhan et al. |
Fig. 1Battery recycling rate in OECD countries including Australia (ABRI 2017)
Fig. 2Battery use, (waste battery) collection and recycling routes in Australia, adapted from (Kyle O’Farrell et al. 2020)
Waste battery collection and regulations in selected countries
| Country | Relevant and latest policy/regulation/legislation on waste battery collection and recycling in the respective country | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| China | The Law of the People’s Republic of China on the Prevention and Control of Solid Waste Pollution (2020 edition) | Sun et al. ( |
| Japan | The Law for the Promotion of the Effective Utilization of Resources (2000) | Australian Battery Recycling Initiative ( |
| Russia | No specific regulation on waste battery collection and recycling. “The Emergence of Responsible Waste Management 2019″ is the government policy that focuses on recycling | Fedotkina et al. ( |
| Spain | Royal Decree 106/2008 Of 1 February on Batteries and Accumulators And Their Waste Environmental Management | Arbués and Villanúa ( |
| Switzerland | a. Chemical Risk Reduction Ordinance (ORRChem); b. Ordinance on the prepaid disposal fee for batteries; c. Ordinance on Movements of Waste (OMW); d. DETEC Ordinance on Lists relating to Movements of Waste (LMW) | Federal Office for the Environment ( |
| Australia | No specific regulation available. Voluntary battery stewardship scheme was granted authorization by Australian Competition & Consumer Commission in September 2020. In 2013–2015, first the battery industry working group was formed | Australian Competition & Consumer Commission ( |
Summary of waste battery disposal and recycling-behavior focused questionnaire survey studies
| Reference | Country (according to the first author) | Research focus | Level of analysis | Kind of batteries considered | Type of survey | Number of samples (effective) | Demographic characteristics considered | Application of statistical/analytical tools and techniques |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sun et al. ( | China | Battery collection and recycling | Residents | Lead-acid batteries and household batteries (dry batteries, LIBs, and button cells) | On-site survey | 1874 | Gender, age, occupation, level of education, monthly income, residents’ region | - |
| Gu et al. ( | China | Ownership, replacement, disposal, and recycling behavior | Individuals | LIBs | Online survey | 786 | Age, occupation, income/month, and residents’ region | Grey Verhulst model (GVM) |
| Chen et al. ( | China | Sales, use, recycling, and disposal pattern | Retailers, corporates, and individuals | Spent e-bicycle batteries (lithium batteries) | Face-to-face Interview | 2138 | Gender, age, level of education, and annual income | Canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) using R-package and SPSS |
| Tian et al. ( | China | WTP and recycling behavior | Residents | Lead-acid battery (LAB) | Face-to-face interview | 931 | Age, gender, education level, and household income | 0–1 style logistic regression and contingent value method (CVM) |
| Asari and Sakai ( | Japan | Consumer behavior, recycling, and cobalt flow | Individuals | LIBs and small batteries (individually used or used in small electronic products) | Online survey | 6500 | Age | - |
| Tarasova et al. ( | Russia | Willingness to participate in the collection system | Residents | Household batteries (zinc/manganese dioxide batteries) | Not mentioned specific type | 526 | Place of residence (region), occupation, and age | - |
| Arbués and Villanúa ( | Spain | Waste battery collection | Households | Not specified | Personal interview | More than 20,000 (secondary survey data) | Income, age, working status, gender, education level | Bivariate probit model |
| Hansmann et al. ( | Switzerland | Recycling behavior, battery consumption | Individual participants | Not specified | Mail survey (paper based) | 608 | Age, gender, household size, family income, region of residence, language spoken | Analyses of covariance (ANCOVAs), regression analyses |
| Salim et al. ( | Australia | Drivers, barriers, and enablers of waste solar photovoltaic (PV) and battery storage system | Government agencies, academics/researchers, recyclers, consultants, and manufacturers | Battery storage system related to system | Online (sent via email) and paper survey | 57 | Location of work, position, type of organization, and their years of experience | Cluster analysis and descriptive statistic with SPSS |
| This study | Australia | Disposal and recycling behavior | Individuals | Household handheld batteries (size specification: AA, AAA, C, D, 9 V, and button cell-type batteries) | Online and paper survey | 400 | Gender, household size, income, level of education, and age | Chi-square test, Binary logistic regression. Correlation and bivariate analysis for model validation using SPSS |
Questionnaire survey form for battery disposal and recycling
| Factor | Response |
|---|---|
| A. Please indicate your gender. | ☐ Male ☐ Female |
| B. Please indicate your age. | ☐ 18-30 ☐ 31-40 ☐ 41-50 ☐ >51 |
| C. Please indicate your level of education | ☐ Primary school and below ☐ High school ☐ Tafe/Diploma ☐ University studies (bachelor, Masters, Phd) |
| D. Please indicate your household size | ☐ 1-2 people ☐ 3-4 people ☐ >=5 people |
| E. Please indicate the level of family income per month | ☐ Less than $3000 ☐ $3000 - $5000 ☐ $5000 - $8000 ☐ $8000 - $13000 ☐ More than $13000 |
| F. What type of portable battery do you use in your households? | ☐ Primary batteries (single use) ☐ Secondary batteries (Rechargeable) |
| G. Do you know that improper disposal of the battery is bad for the environment and loss of resources as well. – | ☐ Yes ☐ No ☐ Didn’t think about it |
| H. How do you dispose of your batteries? | ☐ Kerbside rubbish bin (Red bin) ☐ Kerbside recycling bin (Yellow bin) ☐ Store at home ☐ Battery collection points for recycling ☐ Put them with other materials for council’s clean-up collection |
| I. For recycling, where do you take your batteries? | ☐ ALDI battery collection points ☐ Battery World collection points ☐ Coles supermarkets ☐ Bunnings ☐ Office works ☐ Mobile Muster collection points (e.g., mobile phone retail shop) ☐ Public facilities - Local library, School, Council office, community recycling centers (CRCs) ☐ Other retail stores ☐ Never recycled |
| J. From which source, did you received information on battery recycling? | ☐ From local council’s website ☐ E-waste/problem waste collection/drop-off events ☐ Australian Battery Recycling Initiative (ABRI) website ☐ Came to know at the community recycling centers ☐ PlanetARK’s “Recycling Near You” website ☐ Others – Campaign by organizations ☐ None of the above |
| K. How often do you use PlanetARK’s “Recycling Near You” website to find battery recycling points? | ☐ I use it frequently ☐ I don’t use it ☐ Didn’t know that the website exists |
| L. If you don’t recycle the batteries, what are the reasons? | ☐ Recycling points are far from my households ☐ I do not think battery can be recycled ☐ Don’t know how and where to recycle ☐ I don’t have time disposing of them ☐ Not applicable (in case you recycle) |
| M. In your opinion, what are the most convenient ways of disposing of waste batteries? | ☐ Kerbside recycling bins for battery ☐ Door-to-door collection ☐ Collected at supermarket/retail store with higher proximity ☐ A system that can return deposit as if “Return and Earn” bottle recycling |
| N. If there is a system that gives you incentives, what is your preferred method? | ☐ Old-for-new (you give retailer old batteries and get a new one) ☐ Vouchers to shop other items from the supermarket ☐ Receive vouchers and donate ☐ Cash ☐ Others (Please suggest) ………………. |
| O. Who should be responsible and more active in battery recycling in Australia? | ☐ Government ☐ Customers ☐ Retailers ☐ Manufacturers ☐ All above |
| P. Are you willing to pay additional 20% ($0.1 per unit) of the actual price of a battery for recycling (for example – the current price of an EVEREADY AAA battery is $0.5/unit, which will be $0.6/unit)? | ☐ Yes ☐ No ☐ Undecided |
Chi-square independence test of variables
| Gender | Household size | Income | Level of education | Age | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | ||||||||||
| Willingness to pay (WTP) | 18.318 | 9.162 | 0.057 | 17.205 | 13.679 | 5.181 | 0.521 | |||
| Disposal pathway | 32.579 | 18.285 | 9.56 | 0.889 | 22.139 | 161.858 | ||||
| Perceived responsibility | 5.641 | 0.228 | 16.705 | 35.492 | 26.508 | 27.048 | ||||
| Method of getting incentives | 1.7111 | 0.634 | 9.381 | 0.153 | 16.1511 | 0.169 | 9.708 | 0.138 | 9.306 | 0.41 |
| General level of awareness | 2.306 | 0.316 | 15.039 | 19.693 | 3.882 | 0.422 | 13.212 | |||
Bold numbers refer to significant correlations between the variables (p-value ≤ 0.05)
Fig. 3Characteristics of the respondents on level of awareness
Fig. 4Information received by the respondents from various sources
Fig. 5Characteristics of the respondents for perceived responsibility
Fig. 6Characteristics of the respondents for methods of waste battery disposal
Fig. 7Characteristics of the respondents for WTP
Fig. 8Locations where respondents dispose of batteries for recycling
Model coefficient, p-value, goodness-of-fit and effect size of binary logistic regression mode, considering “preferred method of disposal” and independent variables
| Parameter | BLR model coefficient | BLR | Hosmer and Lemeshow test (goodness-of-fit) for BLR, | Effect size measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kerbside recycling bins for batteries | ||||
| Gender | − 0.061 | 0.779 | 0.441 | |
| Age | 0.07 | 0.454 | ||
| Education | − 0.134 | 0.556 | ||
| Household size | 0.154 | 0.386 | ||
| Income | − 0.036 | 0.676 | ||
| Door-to-door collection | ||||
| Gender | − 0.082 | 0.806 | 0.115 | |
| Age | − 0.074 | 0.601 | ||
| Education | 0.393 | 0.355 | ||
| Household size | 0.431 | 0.108 | ||
| Income | 0.188 | 0.132 | ||
| Disposal at supermarket/retail store with higher proximity | ||||
| Gender | − 0.433 | 0.056 | 0.319 | |
| Age | − 0.084 | 0.388 | ||
| Education | 0.215 | 0.398 | ||
| Household size | − 0.533 | |||
| Income | 0.198 | |||
| A system that can return deposit as for “Return and Earn” bottle recycling | ||||
| Gender | 0.247 | 0.225 | 0.748 | |
| Age | − 0.02 | 0.823 | ||
| Education | − 0.468 | |||
| Household size | 0.04 | 0.808 | ||
| Income | − 0.148 | 0.067 | ||
Bold numbers refer to significant correlations between the variables (p-value ≤ 0.05)
Model coefficient, p-value, goodness-of-fit and effect size of binary logistic regression mode, considering “why the battery is not recycled” and independent variables
| BLR model coefficient | BLR | Hosmer and Lemeshow test (goodness-of-fit) for BLR, | Effect size measure | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recycling points are far from my household | ||||
| Gender | 0.841* | |||
| Age | 0.025 | 0.848 | ||
| Education | ||||
| Household size | 0.25 | 0.489 | ||
| Income | 0.285 | |||
| I do not think battery can be recycled | ||||
| Gender | 0.126 | 0.783 | 0.298 | |
| Age | 0.159 | 0.411 | ||
| Education | − 0.703 | 0.052 | ||
| Household size | 0.89 | |||
| Income | − 0.302 | 0.125 | ||
| Do not know how and where to recycle | ||||
| Gender | 0.003 | 0.989 | 0.121 | |
| Age | − 0.055 | 0.55 | ||
| Education | 1.092 | |||
| Household size | − 0.251 | 0.146 | ||
| Income | − 0.236 | |||
| I do not have time disposing of them | ||||
| Gender | 0.069* | |||
| Age | ||||
| Education | ||||
| Household size | ||||
| Income | 0.153 | 0.099 | ||
Bold numbers refer to significant correlations between the variables (p-value ≤ 0.05). Hosmer and Lemeshow test is for goodness-of-fit for the models. If the p value of the test is higher than 0.05, then the model is fitted. *Results of the revised model