Batterycle
Battery TypeIqaluit, NU

Lithium-Ion Recycling in Iqaluit

Iqaluit generates significant volumes of lithium-ion battery waste from smartphones, laptops, electric vehicles. Batterycle provides certified Lithium-Ion recycling in Iqaluit, Nunavut, recovering 95% of critical materials recovered through advanced lithium-ion batteries are discharged, dismantled, and processed using hydrometallurgical methods.

95%

Recovery Rate

Li-Ion

Chemistry

Class 9

Hazard Class

2-10 years depending on application

Avg Lifespan

Common Lithium-Ion Applications in Iqaluit

smartphoneslaptopselectric vehiclespower toolsenergy storage systems

Recycling Process

Lithium-ion batteries are discharged, dismantled, and processed using hydrometallurgical methods. Cells are shredded in an inert atmosphere to produce black mass, which is then chemically treated to recover lithium, cobalt, nickel, manganese, and copper. The recovered materials are refined to battery-grade purity for direct reuse in new cell manufacturing.

Environmental Impact

Improperly disposed lithium-ion batteries can cause landfill fires, release toxic heavy metals into groundwater, and waste critical minerals that required energy-intensive mining to extract. Recycling one ton of Li-ion batteries prevents approximately 6.3 tons of CO2 emissions compared to mining virgin materials.

Compliance

Regulations for Lithium-Ion Recycling in Nunavut

Battery recycling in Canada is overseen by the Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC). Canada regulates battery recycling through the Canadian Environmental Protection Act (CEPA) and provincial stewardship programs. Provinces like Ontario, Quebec, and British Columbia have mandatory battery collection and recycling programs funded by producers. Nunavut manages battery recycling under the Environmental Protection Act. As Canada's newest and most remote territory, battery recycling presents unique logistical challenges. Batteries collected in Iqaluit and community waste facilities are shipped south for processing. The Government of Nunavut works with federal programs to ensure proper hazardous waste management. Lithium-Ion batteries are classified as Class 9 Hazardous Material (UN3481). Proper handling, transport, and processing must follow hazardous material regulations specific to this classification.

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Lithium-Ion Recycling in Iqaluit

Professional lithium-ion recycling in Iqaluit, NU. Certified, compliant, and environmentally responsible.

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