HomeEnergy Storage ›Fortum Resolves Key EV Sustainability Concern; Enhancing Battery Recycling Rate to Over 80%

Fortum Resolves Key EV Sustainability Concern; Enhancing Battery Recycling Rate to Over 80%

The company accomplished the recycling rate of over 80% with a low-CO2 hydrometallurgical recycling process. The current recycling rate for batteries is roughly 50%. The batteries are first made safe for mechanical treatment, with plastics, aluminum and copper separated and directed to their own recycling processes

March 25, 2019. By News Bureau

Fortum has announced that its new innovative solution makes over 80% of the electric vehicle (EV) battery recyclable, returns the scarce metals back into circulation and resolves the sustainability gap by reducing the need to mine cobalt, nickel, and other scarce metals.

“There are very few working, economically viable technologies for recycling the majority of materials in lithium-ion batteries. We saw a challenge that was not yet solved and developed a scalable recycling solution for all industries using batteries,” states Kalle Saarimaa, Vice President, Fortum Recycling and Waste.

The company accomplished the recycling rate of over 80% with a low-CO2 hydrometallurgical recycling process. The current recycling rate for batteries is roughly 50%. The batteries are first made safe for mechanical treatment, with plastics, aluminum and copper separated and directed to their own recycling processes.

The hydrometallurgical recovery process allows cobalt, manganese and nickel and lithium to be recovered from the battery and delivered to battery manufacturers to be reused in producing new batteries. This technology was developed by Finnish growth company Crisolteq. Crisolteq has a hydrometallurgical recycling facility in Harjavalta, Finland, that is by now able to operate on an industrial scale.

“Circular economy in its strictest sense means recycling an element to its original function or purpose. When we discuss the recycling of lithium-ion batteries, the ultimate aim is for the majority of the battery’s components to be recycled to new batteries,” Saarimaa closes.

The Nordic company is also piloting so-called “second-life” applications for batteries where the EV batteries are used in immobile energy storages after they are no longer fit for their original resolve.

According to a estimate by the International Energy Agency, the number of electric vehicles on the world’s roads will surge from 3 million to 125 million by 2030. In 2015 the global lithium-ion battery recycling market was worth about EUR 1.7 million, but it is projected to boom in the coming years to more than EUR 20 billion.

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