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Other Nonferrous Metals: Material-Specific Data

Note:

This web page contains material-specific information and data on nonferrous metals.

Looking for other information? Take a look at the products and at the other materials we studied.

Still have a question about the data? Check out our Frequent Questions page.

Other nonferrous metals such as lead, copper and zinc are found in durable products, including appliances and consumer electronics. Other than aluminum, lead in lead-acid batteries is the most prevalent nonferrous metal in municipal solid waste (MSW). In this analysis, EPA only includes lead-acid batteries from passenger cars, trucks and motorcycles but does not include lead-acid batteries used in large equipment or industrial applications.

This web page is a summary of nonferrous metal material-specific data. For more comprehensive information, see the 2018 Data Tables on the Advancing Sustainable Materials Management: Facts and Figures Report page.

On this page:

  • Overview
  • Summary Table and Graph

Overview

EPA measures the generation, recycling, composting, combustion with energy recovery and landfilling of other nonferrous metals in MSW.

This is a picture of a green battery in the shape of a box. The background of this picture is black.
The generation of other nonferrous metals in MSW totaled 2.5 million tons in 2018. Lead in batteries accounted for approximately 1.7 million tons of this amount. As a percentage of total generation, other nonferrous metals were less than 1 percent in 2018.

Recycling of other nonferrous metals was approximately 1.7 million tons in 2018, with recycling being due to lead recovered from batteries. In 2018, the estimated amount of recycled battery lead was about 99 percent.

The total amount of other nonferrous metal material in MSW that was combusted in 2018 was 80,000 tons. This was 0.2 percent of total MSW combustion with energy recovery that year.

Landfills received 740,000 tons of MSW other nonferrous metals in 2018. This was 0.5 percent of all MSW landfilled that year.

Please see the EPA Methodology Document for further information on estimating the generation and management of nonferrous metals.


Summary Table and Graph

The data below are from 1960 to 2018, relating to the total number of tons of nonferrous metals generated, recycled, composted, combusted with energy recovery and landfilled.

1960-2018 Data on Other Nonferrous Metals in MSW by Weight (in thousands of U.S. tons)
Management Pathway 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2005 2010 2015 2017 2018
Generation 180 670 1,160 1,100 1,600 1,860 2,020 2,010 2,510 2,510
Recycled - 320 540 730 1,060 1,280 1,440 1,290 1,710 1,690
Composted - - - - - - - - - -
Combustion with Energy Recovery - - 20 60 50 50 60 60 70 80
Landfilled 180 350 600 310 490 530 520 660 730 740

Sources: Battery Council International, Census Bureau, and the National Automobile Dealers Association (for the lead-acid battery portion of nonferrous metals).

A dash in the table means that data is not available.

 

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Last updated on November 8, 2024
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