Lithium batteries are one of the recycling industry’s most urgent priorities. Last year, there were more than 12,000 fires caused by improperly disposed lithium batteries across Australia. This equates to more than 30 per day. Of these fires, 7% resulted in injuries with the average cost to business $417,000*.
The competition will be judged by a panel of waste and recycling industry experts and government leaders. They will evaluate applications and shortlist candidates for funding based on market fit, product readiness, commercial business case and potential impact.
The Waste and Recycling Industry of Queensland’s (WRIQ) project to deliver industry engagement on the management of end-of-life batteries is proudly funded through the Queensland Government’s Recycling and Jobs Fund.
“Actual bin fires have doubled over the past five years. The batteries that power our lives are putting the lives of our waste industry workers at risk,” said Minister for the Environment and Tourism and Minister for Science and Innovation, The Hon Andrew Powell MP.
“We are proud to support this initiative that will attract the brightest minds from international, national and state innovators to work with industry and government on developing technology products and services to solve this issue.”
There is an opportunity for applicants to receive mentorship and support from industry leaders to implement their innovation commercially across Queensland’s waste management facilities.
There are six categories open for this challenge:
- Early detection – creating new ways to spot batteries before they enter the waste stream and cause potential hazards
- Workplace safety – developing solutions to safeguard our workforce and valuable equipment from battery fires
- Sustainable recovery – designing systems for efficient battery recycling that make economic and environmental sense
- Smart extraction – innovating methods for safely handling and removing batteries embedded in devices
- Incident response – creating better ways to prevent and rapidly respond to battery-related fires
- Future-ready design – proposing improvements to battery design that reduce risks in waste handling
“Challenge Waste is designed to celebrate ingenuity, particularly innovations that are hidden from view right across our economy,” said WRIQ CEO Alison Price.
“There are so many fantastic ideas being generated in universities, research organisations and startups here and around the world. We aim to solve one of the most problematic challenges the industry faces while celebrating innovation with the right funding and support, and a pathway to commercialisation for the best and brightest,” Price continued.
No matter how big or small, every idea – from any industry or part of the world – has the opportunity to apply to Challenge Waste.
“If you have a great innovation that delivers a demonstrable impact to solving this issue, this is your opportunity to showcase your ideas and make a real impact. Your innovation could transform how our industry handles lithium batteries, making waste recycling safer and more sustainable,” concluded Price.
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