logo
Vapes made up 33% of electrical devices sold in 2024, report finds

Vapes made up 33% of electrical devices sold in 2024, report finds

RTÉ News​16-06-2025
The public has been urged to recycle vapes and e-cigarettes as a report showed they made up one-third of all electrical devices sold in Ireland last year.
The report, by Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Ireland (WEEE Ireland), found that around 1.1m vapes were recycled in 2024 but around 31 million were sold across the country.
Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, CEO of WEEE Ireland Leo Donovan said: "We would really encourage, particularly the young people, to look at bringing those back to our battery recycling boxes, back to the original retailer that they bought the vape from."
He asked people not to dispose of them in refuse bins.
Mr Donovan added vapes can be returned for free and are accepted in the WEEE Ireland blue battery boxes.
Mr Donovan said vapes are taken apart when recycled and the batteries and electrical components are separated.
"Can it be repaired? Can it be reused after you've finished using it, and then, if not, send it to one of the authorised recycling points, like your electrical retailer and the local authority sites," he said.
The report shows that around 93 million household electronic items were purchased last year, which was almost three times higher than in 2006.
It also found that the proportion of households "hoarding unused devices" rose from 22% in 2023 to 29% this year.
WEEE Ireland also said it collected 16.2 million small appliances and 1.9 million lighting products and 72 million AA batteries in 2024.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dublin Bus chief calls for joint security body to tackle anti-social behaviour across all modes of transport
Dublin Bus chief calls for joint security body to tackle anti-social behaviour across all modes of transport

Irish Independent

time14 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Dublin Bus chief calls for joint security body to tackle anti-social behaviour across all modes of transport

Company CEO Billy Hann made the comments in light of Minister for Transport Darragh O'Brien's announcement on Wednesday that planned recruitment for a transport police force with powers to detain could begin by the end of 2026. "I would like to see a transport-wide solution to the security concerns around anti-social behavior', Mr Hann told RTÉ's Today With Claire Byrne. At present, security on Dublin Bus, Irish Rail and the capital's Luas tram are operated by separate private security firms such as One Complete Solution (OCS) and STT Risk Management. However, Mr Hann would like to see a merged state transport security force, as set out in the government's National Development Plan for 2025. "If you join up those services and have the one company providing those services, they're working off the one set of data. They can sort of move across the various different modes of transport and address the behavior. He added: 'They [troublemakers] don't just stop on the bus. They jump off the bus and they go on the Luas. They get off the Luas, they get on the Dart and so on.' Comparing the effectiveness of current security firms in combatting anti-social behaviour on the country's transport links, Mr Hann highlighted the disjointed nature of the current security infrastructure. "We can remove people from buses. The private security firms do have, under the citizen's arrest, the ability to detain, but they can't arrest.' He added: 'We're not just on one campus like the airport police. We're working across a network.' Mr Hann concedes that introducing the new transport police force is not a 'silver bullet' to fix all problems of anti-social behaviour. Dublin Bus introduced its Safer Journeys Team last October with six operatives working seven days a week to prevent and respond to incidents of anti-social behaviour across its routes in areas specified as problem hot spots.

Watch: Questions remain over US tariff exemptions
Watch: Questions remain over US tariff exemptions

RTÉ News​

time18 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Watch: Questions remain over US tariff exemptions

Questions remain over which areas are exempt from US tariffs on EU goods, RTÉ's Economics and Public Affairs Editor David Murphy has said. Speaking on RTÉ's One News programme, Mr Murphy said there is an awful lot of trade in terms of wine and spirits between the EU and the US and there was talk that those imports could be exempt from tariffs. However, any exemption for these products remains uncertain. In relation to pharmaceuticals, Mr Murphy said the US investigations into pharmaceuticals and semiconductors will need to play out before there is certainty surrounding tariffs on those products. "Thereafter, there is an expectation that there would be a tariff with a ceiling on that of 15%," he said regarding possible future tariffs on pharmaceutical imports. However, Mr Murphy stressed that the EU deal with the US was better than some others with Canada hit with 35% tariffs, India subject to a 25% rate and tariffs of 39% placed on Swiss imports to the US. Today had been set as the deadline for reaching a trade deal with the US, but following a breakthrough in talks last Sunday, an agreement was reached on a 15% levy on most EU exports to the US, expected to take effect on 7 August.

Government could generate up to €118m in tax revenue by setting targets for remote job creation, advocate says
Government could generate up to €118m in tax revenue by setting targets for remote job creation, advocate says

Irish Independent

time19 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Government could generate up to €118m in tax revenue by setting targets for remote job creation, advocate says

It comes as AIB last week announced that its workers must return to the office for a minimum of three days per week from January 2026 in a reversal of its Covid-era policy for non-customer-facing staff. According to Tracy Keogh, co-founder of remote working advocacy group Grow Remote, approximately 100,000 remote jobs are made available across the European Union each month. Ms Keogh said the Irish Government could benefit from a substantial increase in tax revenue if it proactively embraced the work-from-home model in its workforce. "People probably won't know that there's 100,000 remote jobs open across the European Union every month,' she told RTÉ's Morning Ireland. 'If we set a target to win five per cent of those, that's 5,000 jobs.' She added that, if we take the average salary of a remote job at €60,000, this would represent a significant amount of tax generated by Revenue. 'That would be 48 million in taxpayer income per year.' She argues that the establishment of a national target by a pro-remote working government will not just benefit the country in terms of collected revenue, but it would also protect isolated areas of the workforce in the event of a company exodus. "If one [foreign direct investor] pulls out of a rural or regional place, we have left that town stranded. If we have remote jobs coming into the market, that's 118 million from the taxpayer.' Ms Keogh pointed to fintech firm Revolut's recent announcement of 200 remote jobs in Europe for which anybody living in Europe can compete for. "We need a national target to land those jobs into Ireland.' The prospect of businesses mandating a return to the office could see an inevitable worker exodus to remote jobs based on the Continent in search of more flexible working conditions. "In terms of AIB and any other company who since Covid, has decided to pull people back in who were working brilliantly remotely [...] have access to those 100,000 jobs that are available on the market. Ms Keogh acknowledges pushback from employers on the issue, particularly in the realm of employee productivity. This doesn't need to be one silver bullet for every person and company across Ireland. However, she is urging them not to see the advent of remote work as a threat to profitability. "If an employer doesn't want to embrace remote, they don't need to embrace remote. "This doesn't need to be one silver bullet for every person and company across Ireland.' Addressing fears that a growth in remote jobs could result in remote employers competing with office-based employers for workers, Ms Keogh says there should be no in-between. "You should have people who are working in companies, or want remote jobs, working in remote companies. "Then for those companies like AIB, where they have branch staff who have to be on site and present, they will have that tension, and that probably was a factor in how they came to the decision to ask people to come back into the office.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store