Call2Recycle one drum grouping

Call2Recycle is offering a bulk collection service for battery recycling called OneDrum. | Courtesy of Call2Recycle

A battery collection kit sold by Call2Recycle helps communities, MRFs and others reduce the labor needed to sort and prepare batteries for downstream shipment.

The bulk collection service, called OneDrum, allows household hazardous waste collection sites, MRFs, electronics recycling facilities and other accumulators 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 MRFs – 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, said Todd Ellis, managing director of services and solutions at Call2Recycle. Sites will pay around $1,500 for a OneDrum kit, a sum that doesn’t include shipping costs.

Significant labor savings a major selling point

Made of post-consumer glass and produced by CellBlock FCS, CellBlockEX is a hard, granular material that suppresses and extinguishes any fires that occur in the drum. Ellis said CellBlock FCS currently produces the material in Europe but the company is planning to open an East Coast facility to take in post-consumer glass and produce CellBlockEX in about a year and a half.

When using the OnDrum kit, collectors build a “battery parfait” with layers of mixed batteries and CellBlockEX in the drums, Ellis said.

Call2Recycle hears from HHW programs that accept batteries but hesitate to promote that fact to the public, because handling batteries is such a pain for them, he said.

“Too many times, frankly, we’ve heard, ‘Hey, I don’t have the labor for all this,'” Ellis said.

During a 2020-21 OneDrum pilot project, which involved a dozen community programs in California, Washington state and Florida and a California electronics recycling company, the participants reported a roughly 80% savings in labor using OneDrum, Ellis said. Employees were able to prepare about 1,400 pounds of batteries for shipment in several hours, work that would have otherwise taken up to 40 hours.

Ellis noted OneDrum also allows for more efficient use of space, because facilities don’t need to set aside extra square footage for multiple containers to hold different types of batteries.

With OneDrum, collectors aren’t able to put as many batteries in a single drum as they otherwise would, because they also fill it with CellBlockEX, but labor and time savings offset the added costs, Ellis said.

Once filled, the drums will travel in less-than-truckload shipments to large electronics recycling facilities owned by ERI in Fresno, Calif. and Plainfield, Ind., where crews will process them for downstream outlets. Ellis 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.

“We’re really excited to bring this innovative solution together,” Ellis said. “Working collaboratively with CellBlock Containment Systems, as well as ERI, to really pull this whole solution together is really exciting.”

OneDrum is a service that’s over and above Call2Recycle’s long-standing producer-funded drop-off collection network, which relies on retailers and local governments across the country, Ellis said. That network continues to offer drop-off recycling service that’s free to consumers.

A version of this story appeared in E-Scrap News on April 28.

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