Don't Put Batteries in The Bin

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Location
Widnes
They certainly do not go in the same bin here

The recycling bins come round on one week then the "general" binds the next week

As far as batteries go - I have a bag that I put them in and take it to ASDA when it is full - probably should do it soon actually as I haven't for a while

People need to think that if a fire happens then the counsel incur costs - i.e. it comes out of the counsel tax
but people don;t think
 

Electric_Andy

Heavy Metal Fan
Location
Plymouth
I have a drill battery (6mAh) that hasn't worked for a year but I've still kept. Can I chuck that in the battery bin at the supermarket, or should I try to dismantle it and just throw the actual batteries in?
 

Alex321

Guru
Location
South Wales
They certainly do not go in the same bin here

The recycling bins come round on one week then the "general" binds the next week

As far as batteries go - I have a bag that I put them in and take it to ASDA when it is full - probably should do it soon actually as I haven't for a while

People need to think that if a fire happens then the counsel incur costs - i.e. it comes out of the counsel tax
but people don;t think

Yes, it will cost the Council (sic), but they should have insurance.

And battery fires are in fact incredibly rare, paticularly in small household batteries.

I know you shouldn't put them in general waste, but I always thoughht that was because of the toxic chemicals in them, rather than any fire risk.
 
OP
OP
presta

presta

Legendary Member
And battery fires are in fact incredibly rare, paticularly in small household batteries.
They might be rare from the point of view of any one individual battery, but when you have thousands of them all concentrated in waste disposal sites, you end up with a fire every day. Insurance companies are the experts on risk, and if they're starting to refuse cover it'll be because they've noticed a change. My guess is that if it were only a small change they'd just put up the premium, so if they're refusing cover, presumably that's because the risk's making the premiums unaffordable.
 
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