jsheard
Hopefully they get around to banning disposable vapes sooner rather than later, the needless waste with those is just ridiculous. All vapes use lithium batteries due to their high current requirements, but the disposable ones simply have no way to recharge the battery.

Not to mention the fire risk, the vape juice usually runs out before the battery fully discharges so they end up being thrown away still partially charged, which makes them more unstable and eager to catch fire if they get damaged during processing.

https://nfcc.org.uk/over-1200-battery-fires-in-bin-lorries-a...

lmpdev
I wonder how many are Zinc Carbon that consumers erroneously buy not realising they are 40-50% the capacity of an alkaline

Yes Zinc Carbon is better to end up in landfill hazardous materials wise, but the amount of carbon dioxide expended in their production must be enormous globally

Shout out to Ikea selling rebadged Eneloops for ~2-3x cheaper than Panasonic

blueflow
Society should evaluate which devices actually need to run on batteries. It makes me feel odd if i have to replace the batteries in a wall clock that is like half a meter next to a power socket. Wall clocks never get moved around...
PaulKeeble
There are so many devices that are made without replaceable batteries its becoming a real problem. I want an electric toothbrush that takes 18650 or similar cells, same with a shaver and just about every other small powered tool we need replaceable batteries as the device lasts longer than the cells do and it makes recycling the cells harder.
pcdoodle
We need a standard size and connection layout for smaller devices. Something with built in protection so the end users can be careless with them.

I hope to one day see a few rectangular ones (Like old smart phones) and a few cylindrical (something besides 18650 / 21700).

tmaly
There was a post on HN a few years back about an MIT researcher making batteries out of more common materials.

Just like packaging, I think more needs to be done to make materials that are easier to recycle with lower amounts of effort and energy.

windex
It's batteries plus the devices they are in. Its maddening to see how many perfectly good devices get thrown out because of dead batteries.
tombert
I don’t know anything about economics, so consider this disclaimer, but if it’s a concern that the 78M batteries per day is a problem, then maybe we should tax batteries a lot more now to control for externalities?
bArray
If you think that is bad, wait until we need to start decommissioning electric vehicles on scale. I've worked on fossil fuel vehicle EOL for quite a while and a very large amount of recycling happens, there is literally zero waste. Nobody I know wants to do the same for electric vehicles, they are simply too dangerous.