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Use the form below to tell us about your assets, locations, project deadline and disposal requirements. We will review your enquiry and recommend the most practical next step.

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Contact Solidified

Use the form below to tell us about your assets, locations, project deadline and disposal requirements. We will review your enquiry and recommend the most practical next step.

Your information will only be used by us in line with our Privacy Notice.

Edit Template

UK EV Battery Recycling Growth: What It Means for Workplace Electronics and WEEE Disposal

Home / Recycling & Compliance / UK EV Battery Recycling Growth: What It Means for Workplace Electronics and WEEE Disposal

Why Businesses Should Review Workplace Electronics Disposal

What is happening?

Battery recycling and electronic waste management are receiving increasing attention across the UK.

Recent reporting highlights growing investment in battery recycling infrastructure, electric vehicle supply chains and circular economy initiatives linked to lithium-ion battery handling.

At the same time, businesses across many sectors are generating growing volumes of battery-powered workplace technology including:

  • Laptops;
  • Smartphones;
  • Tablets;
  • UPS systems;
  • Handheld scanners;
  • Telecom equipment;
  • Warehouse technology;
  • Portable workplace electronics.

As organisations replace older devices and upgrade infrastructure, more batteries and electronic components are entering workplace disposal streams.

That creates an important operational question:

Are old workplace electronics and batteries being handled correctly before disposal or recycling?


Why this matters

Battery powered workplace devices often contain both sensitive data and specialist recycling requirements.

Older workplace electronics may still contain:

  • Company information;
  • Saved credentials;
  • Cached files;
  • Customer data;
  • Operational records;
  • Removable storage devices.

At the same time, damaged or poorly stored batteries can create additional handling risks if mixed incorrectly with general electronic waste streams.

Without planning, organisations can face:

  • Weak asset tracking;
  • Unclear disposal records;
  • Poor WEEE segregation;
  • Uncertainty around battery handling;
  • Missing devices;
  • Unnecessary storage build up;
  • Weak audit trails.

Modern workplaces also generate much higher volumes of portable electronics than in previous years, especially across hybrid working environments and mobile operations.

That means battery disposal and workplace electronics recycling increasingly require structured planning rather than occasional clear-outs.


What this means for different organisations

Small businesses

Small businesses often accumulate old laptops, phones and battery-powered devices in cupboards and storage areas for years.

Medium sized businesses

Medium organisations may manage mixed generations of portable workplace technology across offices and remote workers.

Large organisations

Large estates may generate substantial volumes of lithium battery-powered electronics during refresh projects and relocations.

Multinationals

Global organisations may operate central sustainability strategies while handling WEEE and battery disposal locally under UK requirements.

Public sector organisations

Healthcare, education and government environments frequently manage high volumes of mobile devices and sensitive electronics.

Contractors and subcontractors

Facilities teams, warehouse operators and relocation contractors regularly encounter redundant electronics and battery-powered devices during projects.

MSPs and IT providers

Managed service providers increasingly support clients with secure disposal coordination, device refreshes and workplace recycling processes.


Practical checks before workplace electronics leave site

Before devices and batteries are removed, organisations should ask:

  1. Do we have a full inventory of workplace electronics?
  2. Which devices still contain sensitive data?
  3. What requires NIST 800-88 aligned data erasure?
  4. What requires secure physical destruction?
  5. Are lithium batteries separated correctly from general WEEE?
  6. Are damaged batteries identified safely?
  7. Are serial numbers and asset tags being recorded?
  8. Will audit trails and certificates be produced afterwards?
  9. Have remote worker devices also been included?
  10. Who internally signs off disposal activities?


Where Solidified Ltd supports

Solidified Ltd supports organisations with:

  • Secure IT asset disposal;
  • NIST 800-88 aligned data erasure;
  • Secure physical destruction;
  • WEEE and e-waste recycling;
  • IT refresh disposal;
  • Office relocation clearance;
  • Lease return support;
  • Data centre decommissioning recycling;
  • Value recovery;
  • Workplace recycling education;
  • Responsible recycling.

The focus is on maintaining a controlled and documented process with secure handling, asset tracking, chain of custody and clear audit trails.


Planning a workplace technology refresh, office move or electronics clearance project?

Speak to Solidified Ltd before equipment leaves your control.


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