Residents of the City of Albuquerque and Bernalillo County may bring residential hazardous wastes to the Household Hazardous Waste Collection Center (HHWCC) at no charge. As of Dec. 1, 2023, the HHWCC service is operated under contract by Safety-Kleen
Same service, new location and hours!
Safety-Kleen
2720 Girard NE, 87107
New hours: Monday, Wednesday, Friday 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. and Saturday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Phone: 505-884-2277
Household Hazardous Waste Collection Center is only permitted to receive residential materials. All commercial hazardous waste, including waste from public agencies, businesses, and non-profits must be disposed of through a state permitted vendor. See list of New Mexico Environment Department permitted vendors.
Waste that can burn easily (flammable), corrode or irritate skin (corrosive), generate heat or explode (reactive), or poison humans and animals (toxic) are examples of household hazardous wastes.
The Household Hazardous Waste Collection Center also offers a material reuse area where usable materials brought to the Center for disposal are offered to the public free of charge.
Call Safety Kleen at 505-884-2277 for a list of local companies that recycle ni-cad batteries.
For more information contact ABQ 311 at 505-768-2000 or the Solid Waste Management Department at 505-761-8300.
Material | May Be Reused or Recycled | May Be Poured Down the Drain | May Be Placed in Trash for Landfill | Take to HHWCC |
---|---|---|---|---|
Artist Oils and Acrylics | X | |||
Chemistry Sets | X | |||
Gun Cleaning Solvents | X | |||
Photo Chemicals | X 1 | X | ||
Flashlights and Toy Batteries | X | |||
Oil Based Paints | X | |||
Primers, Rusts, Stains, Varnishes | X | |||
Wood Preservatives | X | |||
Latex Paints | X 2 | X | ||
Paint Thinner | X | |||
Turpentine | X | |||
Paintbrush Cleaner (phosphate based) | X 1 | |||
Paintbrush Cleaner (solvent based) | X | |||
Paint, Varnish, Stripper (lye based) | X 1 | |||
Paint, Varnish, Stripper (solvent based) | X |
Material | May Be Reused or Recycled | May Be Poured Down the Drain | May Be Placed in Trash for Landfill | Take to HHWCC |
---|---|---|---|---|
Basin, Tub, Tile, Window Cleaners | X 1 | |||
Bleach | X 1,2 | |||
Toilet Bowl Disinfectants | X 1 | |||
Dry Cleaning Fluid, Spot Remover | X | |||
Glue (solvent based) | X 3 | X | ||
Glue (water based) | X 3 | |||
Mothballs | X | |||
Upholstery Cleaner (detergent based) | X 1 | |||
Upholstery Cleaner (solvent based) | X | |||
Copper, Silver Polish | X 3,4 | |||
Floor, Furniture Polish | X | |||
Rust Remover | X | X | ||
Light Bulbs, Tubes | X | |||
Flea Collars | X | |||
Fertilizer | X | |||
Fungicides, Insecticides, Rat Poison | X | |||
Roach Killer | X | |||
Weed Killer | X | |||
Empty Containers | X |
Material | May Be Reused or Recycled | May Be Poured Down the Drain | May Be Placed in Trash for Landfill | Take to HHWCC |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cosmetics | X | |||
Hair Permanent | X 1 | |||
Head Lice Shampoo | X 1 | |||
Over the Counter Medicine (liquid and non-liquid) | X | |||
Prescription Medicine (liquid and non-liquid) | X | |||
Antibiotics | X 3 | |||
Nail Polish | X 2 | |||
Nail Polish Remover | X 2 | X | ||
Perfume/Shaving Lotion | X 1 | |||
Rubbing Alcohol | X 1 | |||
Shoe Polish | X | |||
Hearing Aid Batteries | X |
Fluorescent light bulbs contain mercury vapor that is used to produce the light. Light bulbs containing mercury can be dangerous to your health and the environment, and should not be thrown in the trash.
The City of Albuquerque Solid Waste Management Department recommends that fluorescent bulbs be disposed of the following ways:
The following information is recommended by Energy Star, a US Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Department of Energy Program.
Because compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulbs contain a small amount of mercury, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recommends the following clean-up and disposal guidelines:
Ionization detectors may contain very small amounts of low-level radioactive material.
Several types of smoke detectors are available for home use. These smoke detectors include ionization detectors and photoelectric detectors. An ionization detector uses a small disk of radioactive material to detect particles emitted by combustion. A photoelectric detector uses a photo-sensor and light beam to detect smoke. A particular smoke detector technology may only detect certain types of fires. For more information about how detectors work, and the correct applications and sensitivities of ionization detectors vs. photoelectric detectors, see the EPA Website on Smoke Detectors and Radiation.
Do not crush smoke detector.
For more information contact the Albuquerque Solid Waste Management Department at 505-761-8300.
Propane gas cylinders are used to fuel items including gas grills, torches, and camping equipment such as stoves, lanterns, and heaters. Propane cylinders are either single-use or refillable.
Propane is flammable and explosive.
An empty tank still contains a small amount of propane gas, and may explode in a garbage truck or when the garbage is processed. Propane tanks in garbage are a safety hazard to people and can damage equipment.
Most scrap metal yards will not accept intact propane tanks, even if they are empty.
Take unusable or unwanted propane tanks (single-use or refillable) to a propane marketer, pressurized gas retailer, or gas service company.
Local companies that will accept up to 100-pound refillable Propane Cylinders for disposal, including Coleman 16-ounce/1-pound propane canisters, as of June 2017:
R&L Enterprise 1
Only accepts propane and propane tanks. Does not accept any other hazardous waste material.
14305 Central NW (Exit 149 off Interstate 40 (Atrisco Vista), 1 mi west on N. Frontage located in RV park)
Albuquerque, NM 87121
505-836-4772
1. SWMD recommends contacting the company before drop-off of cylinder.