Media release: Tuesday, 30 October 2018
A group of local and international businesses has joined forces to stop mountains of e-waste being created by the rising
number of large lithium-ion batteries in New Zealand.
Led by energy company Vector, the Battery Leaders Group aims to find circular economy solutions for the batteries that
are powering everything from electric vehicles to Vector Lights when they reach their end of life.
“The numbers of electric vehicles on our roads is growing and with a battery life of around 5-15 years this could become
a significant new waste stream for NZ to deal with,” said Simon Mackenzie, Vector Group Chief Executive.
“That’s why we’ve formed this Leaders Group to tackle the issue head on. It will be good for the country if we succeed
in reducing waste to landfill, and Group members will benefit through pre-competitive collaboration to unlock new parts
of the battery value chain.”
“Given we have an opportunity to get ahead of the problem, it makes sense for us to try.”
The Battery Leaders Group includes representatives from Vector, Audi, BMW, Toyota, Scrap Metal Recycling Association of
New Zealand, and Waste Management NZ.
The Group has released a joint statement committing to researching the market for end of life batteries from electric
vehicles, and home energy storage.
Mr Mackenzie said the group would conduct research into the scale of the problem and develop formal recommendations on
how a future product stewardship scheme should be implemented.
“We’re initially aiming to quantify and identify business opportunities designed to give second-life use to large
batteries. For Vector, some of those uses could be in network ancillary services like grid stability, or even displacing
temporary diesel generation in some cases”.
“We’re also aiming to keep e-waste costs to a minimum for consumers by developing industry insights and recommendations
for a future lithium-ion battery product stewardship scheme”.
“This is an excellent example of New Zealand business coming together to solve a shared problem, in a way that supports
a low-emission, high productivity economy.”
The Battery Leaders Group Joint Statement can be found on vector.co.nz.
ENDS