Mobility

First facility for recycling electric car batteries in EU to be built in Poland

First facility for recycling electric car batteries in EU to be built in Poland elemental

Photo: Eveline de Bruin from Pixabay

Published

April 9, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

April 9, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Polish recycling company Elemental Holding will construct a EUR 182 million facility for treating batteries and other metals containing waste. The plant will be the first in the EU, and one of the first in the world.

Electric vehicles are the main solution for reducing CO2 emissions in transport as well as air pollution, but their expansion will produce another issue – used batteries. Recycling can reduce the need for extracting minerals and manufacturing raw materials.

There aren’t many recycling factories around the world, as the number of EVs is low. According to Autoweek, more companies and carmakers are making plans to recycle in order to save costs. For example, German carmaker Volkswagen has recently opened a pilot plant in Salzgitter, while Canadian company Li-Cycle is developing the largest battery recycling plant in North America.

Facility will produce metals that can be reused as raw materials for new batteries

Polish company Elemental Holding collects and recycles platinum group metals and electrical waste. It operates in Poland, other European countries, the Middle East and the United States of America.

The production and use of recycled batteries can lead to carbon savings as high as 98% compared to their primary counterparts

According to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the plant in Poland will produce secondary metals and other materials that can be reused as raw materials for new batteries or other applications, providing an essential service in the lithium-ion battery value chain.

The production and use of recycled batteries and metals can lead to carbon savings as high as 98% compared to their primary counterparts, as well as to more efficient use of scarce natural resources.

EBRD will provide EUR 25 million loan for the investment, which is also co-financed by Poland’s NCBR, and the European Union

EBRD said it approved a EUR 25 million loan for Elemental Holding within a wider package to finance the construction of the pioneering facility, one of the first in the world to treat spent lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles and other waste containing metals that are critical for e-mobility.

The facility in Poland entails the deployment of state-of-the-art innovative technology supplemented and co-financed by the Polish National Centre for Research and Development (NCBR), with the support of the European Commission.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

european commission co2 standards new cars vans delay 2027

EU gives European carmakers more time to comply with CO2 standards

02 April 2025 - Transport & Environment says the delay for carmakers proposed by the European Commission must be the final concession

iea report energy 2024 renewables heat ai data centers

IEA’s Global Energy Review: Electricity use is growing rapidly, driven by heatwaves, electrification, data centers, AI

25 March 2025 - Global energy demand grew at a faster-than-average pace in 2024, according to the IEA’s Global Energy Review

serbia kragujevac citroen eC3 stellantis

Another electric vehicle to be produced in Serbia – Citroën e-C3

21 March 2025 - In July last year, automotive giant Stellantis launched trial production of the electric Fiat Grande Panda in Kragujevac

Janom Mirova GreenWay EV charging market EUR 50 million investment round

Janom, Mirova strengthen GreenWay’s position in EV charging market with over EUR 50 million investment round

19 March 2025 - Janom Investments, a leading CEE investor in clean technologies and co-founder of GreenWay, participated in another investment round for the company