Consumers Encouraged to Charge Up on National Battery Day Français
Call2Recycle, Inc. Leverages Holiday to Increase Battery Recycling Awareness and Education
Call2Recycle, Inc. Leverages Holiday to Increase Battery Recycling Awareness and Education
ATLANTA and TORONTO, Feb. 13, 2017 /CNW/ -- Call2Recycle, Inc., North America's first and largest consumer battery stewardship and recycling organization, is encouraging consumers across the U.S. and Canada to Lead the Charge on National Battery Day (February 18) by collecting and recycling their used batteries.
National Battery Day is a celebration of the vital role batteries play in our everyday lives, while drawing attention to the ease and importance of recycling them at the end of their useful life. In a recent Nielsen survey commissioned by Call2Recycle®, only four out of 10 North American consumers classify themselves as battery recyclers. For many, one of the main barriers to recycling is not knowing how or where to recycle certain items.
Battery recycling is increasingly important to:
Call2Recycle is teaming up with its numerous battery collection partners to raise consumer awareness of how and where to properly dispose of their old batteries. Through its robust network of collection partners and industry stewards, battery recycling is easy and convenient. The Call2Recycle program ensures that batteries and cellphones are collected and responsibly recycled; thereby keeping potentially hazardous materials from entering the waste stream.
The Call2Recycle program makes it easy to be a responsible battery user with its network of more than 30,000 drop-off locations including community centers, depots, and retail stores that many consumers may visit regularly, like Best Buy, Jean Coutu, London Drugs, Lowe's, Staples, The Home Depot and more. When your batteries run out, find a battery collection site to recycle them by visiting www.call2recycle.org/locator.
"Batteries afford us many every day conveniences and are essential in powering our daily lives, and this freedom to go unplugged comes with a responsibility," says Linda Gabor, VP of Marketing and Customer Service at Call2Recycle, Inc. "Eighty-eight percent of North Americans live within 10 miles (15 kilometers) of a Call2Recycle drop-off location – a convenient and effective way for people to get involved in recycling not just on National Battery Day, but all year long."
The battery stewardship organization recently announced that a record-setting 14 million pounds (6.3 kilograms) of batteries and cellphones were collected throughout the U.S. and Canada in 2016. This significant milestone marks the twentieth consecutive year of increased collections by Call2Recycle, contributing to the 129 million pounds (58 million kilograms) of batteries diverted from landfills and responsibly recycled over the past two decades.
About Call2Recycle, Inc.
Call2Recycle, Inc. is committed to protecting and preserving the environment through collecting and recycling consumer batteries and cellphones. Founded in 1994, the not-for-profit organization works on behalf of stakeholders to provide its battery recycling program to consumers across the U.S. and Canada through almost 30,000 convenient drop-off locations. Visit call2recycle.org. Follow at facebook.com/call2recycle or twitter.com/call2recycle.
SOURCE Call2Recycle, Inc.
Yakesha Cooper, Environics Communications (U.S.), [email protected], (202) 296-2002 | Emma McKay, Environics Communications (Canada), [email protected], (416) 969-2796 |Linda Gabor, VP of Marketing & Customer Service, Call2Recycle®, [email protected], (678) 218-1082, http://www.call2recycle.org
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