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READER QUESTION

Where can I dispose my old electronics in Germany?

Did you know that throwing out old electronics in the regular mixed trash is illegal in Germany? Here are the easiest ways to safely and legally dispose of e-waste in Germany.

pile of old washing machines
Two workers sorting recycled appliances at a company that handles electronic and plastic waste. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/CTK | Petráek Radek

Electronic waste or e-waste (Elektroschrott or E-Müll) is one of those not-so-sexy aspects of modern life. 

We collect a wide assortment of personal electronics in our day to day lives – from smartphones to hair dryers to toaster ovens – and eventually they break or go unused, and end up hidden away in a dark corner in our closets or cellars.

According to Germany’s statistical office (Destatis), German residents produce more e-waste per capita than the European average – 12.5 kilograms per person per year in Germany as opposed to 10.5 kilograms across Europe.

What this amounts to practically is you having three dead phones and a nest of old chargers in the back of an old desk drawer, or perhaps an old mini-fridge to dispose of in your cellar.

Learning to sort and dispose of your waste properly in Germany is a notoriously tricky task for many newcomers, and putting electronics in the regular trash or recycling bins is illegal in Germany. Therefore you may find yourself with an armful of dead gadgets asking, “How do I get rid of these?”

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED – The complete guide to recycling in Germany

Fortunately, disposing of most small household electronics in Germany can be surprisingly easy. 

Where can I dispose of my old smartphone?

In most cases, the easiest place to dispose of personal electronics is your nearest supermarket.

Since July 2022 supermarkets and discount retailers with a store size of 800 square metres or more are required to collect small electrical appliances free of charge. 

This generally applies to Germany’s main supermarket chains like Rewe, Penny, Lidl and Aldi. It also applies to electronics stores like MediaMarkt and Saturn.

These stores are required to accept electronics with an edge length up to 25 centimetres, such as; razors, electric toothbrushes, chargers, small toasters or smartphones. 

Note that these stores are only be required to accept up to three items at a time, so if you have a stockpile of electronics to dispose of, you may have to break them up in separate trips.

old phones

A pile of outdated phones seen at a drop-off collection point. Photo: picture alliance / dpa | Maurizio Gambarini

Smaller items like dead batteries or lightbulbs can often be dropped off at these locations as well. Just ask the staff where they are gathered.

If your local market is smaller than 800 square metres, you may need to try elsewhere. 

Additionally, there have been reports of markets not fulfilling their collection requirements.

For example, the Cologne Regional Court fined an Aldi Nord store in North Rhine-Westphalia after it failed to take three electronic items from a customer who had tried to drop them off.

The German environmental non-profit Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH) had tested electronics drop-offs at Aldi and other retailer locations and found some deficiencies. 

In this case, Aldi suggested that the employee involved had no knowledge of the regulation and was sentenced to pay a meagre fine of €386.20. But in more severe cases stores could theoretically face fines up to €250,000 for failing to fulfil their collection duties.

What about bulkier items?

Supermarkets and electronics retailers are not responsible for collecting bulkier items.

An exception is made when you are buying a new comparable appliance to replace an old one.

For example, if you bring your old TV monitor to MediaMarkt the store would be required to take it from you when you purchase a new one.

Alternatively, bigger electronics, or larger loads of items can be disposed of at your local Recyclinghof or Wertstoffhof.

You can also search for your closest registered drop-off location for specific items on this e-scrap return finder

Or, for more information about trading-in or reselling old electronics, check-out this explainer.

Why you shouldn’t throw them away

It’s important to dispose of e-waste properly because of its unique environmental impacts.

“If electronic waste is disposed of incorrectly, valuable raw materials are lost and the heavy metals, flame retardants and plasticizers it contains endanger the environment,” explained DUH’s Federal Managing Director in a published statement.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED – Why and how to start a zero-waste lifestyle in Germany

In an effort to reduce e-waste, the EU adopted the so-called “right to repair” directive earlier this year, which will require electronics manufacturers to offer reasonably priced repair services and therefore hopefully reduce consumers’ need to buy new electronics.

In the meantime, you can drop off your smaller electronics at the grocery store.

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ENVIRONMENT

Germany must do more to improve air quality, court rules

A German environmental group has won a lawsuit against the government for not adequately addressing air pollution. Demands for more immediate measures to reduce pollution could reignite the debate on motorway speed limits.

Germany must do more to improve air quality, court rules

The Higher Administrative Court in Berlin-Brandenburg ruled that the traffic coalition government has not made adequate efforts to address air pollution in Germany.

Specifically, the court found that Germany’s “National Air Pollution Control Program” was not sufficient to meet emissions reduction targets that have been set by the EU.

The case was brought by the non-profit Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH), which focuses on enforcing environmental protections in Germany.

“This is a really good day for clean air in Germany,” DUH Federal Managing Director Jürgen Resch said after the ruling. “For the first time, the federal government has been sentenced to adopt and implement really effective additional measures for the reduction of air pollutants.”

In mid-May DUH had won another case against failed policies when the Higher Administrative Court (OVG) ruled that the federal government needs to tighten up its climate protection program.

READ ALSO: Why are Last Generation activists in Germany getting prison sentences?

The decision is not yet legally binding as the government could appeal at the Federal Administrative Court in Leipzig.

What is the case about?

The case refers to a programme adopted by the German government in 2019, and then updated in May 2024, which included measures for reducing emissions from air pollutants. 

In addition to reducing air pollution, the programme is meant to keep Germany compliant with EU law.

In an effort to reduce human health risks, the EU Parliament has set rules requiring member states to take action toward reducing air pollutant emissions to certain levels by 2030.

The air pollutants in focus include ammonia, particulate matter, sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxide. 

DUH suggests that Germany’s program is inadequate. In particular, the most recent data on emissions had not been accounted for.

Also, measures originally included have since been cancelled or weakened.

What new measures could we see?

Despite the likelihood of appeal, DUH Director Resch hopes to start talks with the transport, construction and environmental ministries about measures to significantly reduce nitrogen oxide emissions.

One measure that could help immediately would be setting a speed limit on the Autobahn

Environmental organisations have called for Autobahn speed limits for years. But despite public opinion polls that have shown that the majority of Germans would approve of the measure, the topic remains politically divisive. 

Finance Minister Christian Lindner of the liberal Free Democrat Party, for example, has previously called general speed limits “unnecessary”.

After the ruling was announced, the Ministry of the Environment put out a statement acknowledging the decision and pledging to examine the ruling “comprehensively” as soon as it was available in writing.

How severe is air pollution in Germany?

Compared to other parts of the world, and even to other countries in Europe, Germany enjoys decent air quality – and it’s gotten better since 1990.

But air pollutants still pose a great danger to health and lead to a number of premature deaths and diseases such as asthma or cardiovascular diseases. 

READ ALSO: ‘Prepare for 3C rise’ – Europe warned it must do more to deal with climate crisis

According to the DUH, around 28,000 people die prematurely in Germany every year due to nitrogen dioxide and 68,000 people due to particulate matter. 

Particulate matter is produced, for example, by emissions from motor vehicles and coal-fired power plants.

Recent developments that are expected to affect air pollution levels in Germany include: an amendment to the Building Energy Act which allows wood pellet heating systems, the end of state subsidies for electric vehicles, and a delay in the phase out of coal-fired power plants.

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