The new regulation aims to reduce the environmental impact of batteries and create a competitive industry within the EU.
EU lawmakers have announced new rules to make batteries more sustainable and competitive across the bloc’s market.
The new regulation covers the entire life cycle of batteries, from the sourcing of materials to their recycling and repurposing. The provisional agreement was reached between the European Parliament and Council on 9 December.
The new law means sustainability requirements will be introduced for batteries from 2024 onwards, on areas such as carbon footprint, recycled content, performance and durability.
All collected batteries will have to be recycled and high levels of recovery will need to be achieved, with a focus on valuable materials such as copper, cobalt, lithium, nickel and lead.
The regulation also means that companies placing batteries on the EU market will have to demonstrate that the materials used for their manufacturing were sourced responsibly.
The rules stem from the European Commission, which issued a proposal in 2020 to modernise EU legislation on batteries and reduce their environmental impact.
The Commission said batteries are a key technology that play a central role in the European Green Deal, which is working towards a carbon-neutral continent by 2050.
It added that the new framework will support Europe’s clean energy transition and independence from fuel imports, while making a competitive battery industry for the EU.
Commission for the internal market Thierry Breton said global competition in electric mobility is “fierce” and battery demand has increased sharply.
“We want to ensure that we are not a mere subcontractor depending on others, and that clean mobility leads to jobs in Europe,” Breton said. “This is even more vital since electric vehicles are less complex and labour-intensive to produce than combustion engines.”
“With the new Regulation agreed today we will ensure that batteries placed in the EU market – even if produced in a third country – are sustainable and safe throughout their entire life cycle.
The European Commission said the regulatory framework will require a lot of more detailed rules – or secondary legislation – to be adopted from 2024 to 2028 to be fully operational.
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