The battery is the element that contains different metals in its composition, like mercury in flat batteries, or cadmium in rechargeable batteries. There are other worrying toxic metals such as magnesium, nickel and zinc. Therefore, although not all batteries have the same level of toxicity, they all have a high concentration in metals that should be considered a dangerous residue.
Batteries facilitate the use of various gadgets that we use in our daily lives, but if we throw them away with ordinary rubbish, they end up in landfills or incinerating plants.
Contamination of Batteries
In landfills, with time, the exterior shell of the battery is eroded and the inside is tipped and transferred into subterranean waters and the earth, which causes them to enter the nature food chain, from which human beings nourish.At incinerating plants, resulting fumes will give way to volatile toxic elements, contaminating the air.
How do batteries contaminate?
Batteries take a long period of time to disintegrate and therefore contaminate slowly, during a long period of time in any given ecosystem. Here are several ways in which batteries contaminate the ecosystem:
- The toxic substances that batteries emit whilst they are decomposing contaminate the air, causing harmful effects to the health of living beings.
- On the other hand, batteries also contaminate the ground. This provokes changes to the ecosystems. Fertile ground diminishes in these areas, leading to deaths of animals and living beings in those areas because of the diminished food resources.
- Waste from batteries also contaminate the water, superficial and subterranean waters, causing widespread problems and annihilation of agriculture and livestock, and especially to the marine ecosystems.
Picking and selecting batteries
What you can do from home
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These rechargeable batteries can be reused up to 500 times |
Getting rid of batteries
Statistics
However it is notable that there aren't enough options in the UK to recycle batteries when they are so commonly used to power household electrical goods.In 2012 in the UK, only a 32% of batteries were recycled. Compare this to Switzerland, where in the same year 73% of batteries were recycled, and the results are dire.
Tags: Hazards of batteries lying in landfills, how to dispose safely of batteries, battery hazards, dangers of batteries, pollution of batteries on the environment
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