Litcius/Paper detail

Steering extended producer responsibility for electric vehicle batteries

Louis Dawson, Jyoti Ahuja, Robert Lee

2021Environmental Law Review32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The UK Government has announced its plans to bring forward the deadline for phasing out all petrol and diesel vehicles from 2040 to 2030, 10 years earlier than planned. This is a radical acceleration in the transition to electric mobility. The need to draw up coherent and robust UK regulatory structures for managing the end-of-life consequences of this transition is now more urgent than ever. This article explores the potential role of extended producer responsibility (EPR) in facilitating the safe and sustainable management of electric vehicle (EV) batteries at their end of life. It outlines the current EV battery problem from the perspective of end-of-life management, before exploring the utility of EPR in achieving a circular economy approach and reviewing the current EPR frameworks that would apply to this waste stream once a battery is no longer powerful enough to drive an EV. We conclude that current EPR frameworks for battery management are neither sufficiently clear nor suitably robust to ensure safe and sustainable electric lithium ion battery management and suggest how these could be remodelled to achieve better outcomes in this area.

Topics & Concepts

Battery (electricity)Electric vehicleExtended producer responsibilityBusinessEnvironmental economicsAutomotive engineeringEngineeringEconomicsPower (physics)PhysicsQuantum mechanicsExtraction and Separation ProcessesAdvanced Battery Technologies ResearchRecycling and Waste Management Techniques