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Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs An Roinn Talmhaíochta, Comhshaoil agus Gnóthaí Tuaithe Depairtment o' Fairmin, Environment an' Kintra Matthers

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  • Batteries

    Topics:
    • Resource & Waste Policy, 
    • Extended Producer Responsibility
    DAERA is working with Defra, Scottish Government and Welsh Government to reform the two main UK wide pieces of environmental legislation that relate specifically to batteries.

    Background

    In Northern Ireland, waste is a devolved issue but due to industry preference and the nature of UK-wide value chains, the producer responsibility scheme for batteries is managed on a UK-wide basis.

    For further information and guidance on placing batteries on the market and the treatment of waste batteries please see Waste Batteries and Accumulators Regulations

    NIEA WEEE and Batteries Compliance Monitoring Plan

    Producer Responsibility Policy Updates

    DAERA is working with Defra, Scottish Government and Welsh Government to reform the two main UK wide pieces of environmental legislation that relate specifically to batteries: The Batteries and Accumulators (Placing on the Market) Regulations 2008 (SI 2008/2164)

    These are reserved matters mainly concerning placing on the market requirements.

    The Waste Batteries and Accumulators Regulations 2009 (SI 2009/890). These are devolved matters detailing end-of-life provisions.

    UK wide proposals are being explored, and a public consultation is currently in development.

    EU Batteries Regulation

    The EU Batteries Regulation 2023/1542 has been in force since 18 February 2024. Northern Ireland will implement this EU regulation as it is within the scope of the Windsor Framework. DAERA is currently assessing the necessary requirements and supporting implementing legislation for Northern Ireland and is working closely with Defra (Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs). DAERA will engage with stakeholders through this process.

    The EU Batteries Regulation will gradually introduce new measures over the next 10+ years which strengthen sustainability of batteries and waste batteries, protect the environment and human health and increase circularity.

    For further information on the EU Batteries Regulation please see The EU Batteries Regulation.

    Please contact regdivergenceGBNI@defra.gov.uk and copy DAERA.EPR2@daera-ni.gov.uk if you have any queries.

    Related to Batteries

    Most recent publications

    • SINGLE-USE VAPES

      Published 9 August 2024
    See all publications in this topic

    Access to information

    How to request information from the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs including Freedom of Information (FOI), Environmental Information Regulations (EIRs) and the use of our Publication Scheme.

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