bifa-aktuell | 02.10.2019

End-of-life lamp recycling life cycle assessment

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© Photo: Fotolia/brunok1

Within the scope of a study undertaken for Lightcycle Retourlogistik und Service GmbH, mercury balances and analyses of other environmental effects were produced for the eol
lamp treatment and downstream recovery paths.

With the help of the life-cycle assessment, the potential effects of possibly changed limits for mercury contents on the disposal paths were illustrated and environmental interactions were also shown.

Due to close cooperation with the operators of treatment plants, a very good database was available to describe the fractions from the treatment, which was linked with secondary data as part of the life-cycle consideration to describe the disposal chain.

The main objective of eol lamp treatment is to remove mercury from the materials used to produce the lamps. The existing eol lamp recycling system achieves very high mercury
separation. More than 95 % of the mercury contained in the eol lamps is removed from the material cycle in fractions for disposal (e.g. phosphor powder, adsorbents). Around 90 % of the lamp materials can therefore be recycled after treatment. In particular, due to the recycling, the treatment of almost 8,000 t eol lamps in Light-cycle’s take-back system means an approx. 7,000 t CO2 equivalents lower impact to the environment.

Setting tighter mercury limits for fractions from the treatment could lead to the displacement of treatment fractions, which have been recovered until now, in the disposal. Alternatively, thermal after-treatment of fractions contaminated with mercury is feasible, so that they can continue to be added to a recovery process.

Regarding mercury emissions in air, the setting of very tight limits and limits at the level of EN 50625-2-1, which reflects current state-of-the-art technology, would lead to a reduction of a few kilograms of mercury per year. This quantity will continue to reduce in the next few years due to falling quantities of lamps to be treated and the reducing quantity of mercury in the lamp mixture to be treated.

You want more information?
You are welcome to contact me:

Thorsten Pitschke
tpitschke@bifa.de