NY Battery-Recycling Project Gets $375 Million US Backing

image is BloomburgMedia_RQLL0UT0AFB401_27-02-2023_15-00-08_638130528000000000.jpg

Electric car charging point symbol in Germany. Photographer: Bloomberg Creative Photos/Bloomberg

The U.S. subsidiary of Li-Cycle Holdings Corp. is getting a $375 million loan offer from the Biden administration for the expansion of a New York lithium-ion battery recycling plant. 

The conditional loan would help finance the expansion of a first-of-its-kind facility in Rochester that recycles old lithium-ion batteries into chemicals that can he used for the batteries of more than 200,000 electric vehicles a year, according to the Energy Department. Li-Cycle shares jumped as much as 9% in pre-market trading on Monday.

The funding from the department’s Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Loan Program comes amid a broader White House goal of having half of all vehicles sales in 2030 be zero-emission. It also follows a $2 billion commitment announced earlier this month to EV battery component maker and lithium-ion battery recycler Redwood Materials Inc.

“By supporting a circular economy for critical materials, the project is expected to reduce the U.S. reliance on global supply chains or new mining,” the Energy Department said of its financing offer to Li-Cycle. “The critical materials that make up EV batteries are in high demand and can be difficult to procure.”

The Li-Cycle project will use a technique called hydrometallurgical recycling to recover battery-grade lithium carbonate, cobalt sulfate, nickel sulfate, and other critical materials from manufacturing scrap materials and used batteries, the Energy Department said. 

The administration’s support for the project comes as it seeks to create a domestic battery supply chain. Demand for lithium, which also is used for grid storage and weapons, is projected to exceed current production by 2030. The US relies on international markets for the processing of most raw materials, according to the department. 

“Currently, a handful of countries control most of the global battery recycling supply chain, with China dominating lithium carbonate refining markets,” the department said. “Li-Cycle expects its facility to be the first source of recycled battery-grade lithium carbonate in North America.” 

 

 

 

--With assistance from .

(Updates with share-price reaction on second paragraph.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

By Ari Natter

KEEPING THE ENERGY INDUSTRY CONNECTED

Subscribe to our newsletter and get the best of Energy Connects directly to your inbox each week.

By subscribing, you agree to the processing of your personal data by dmg events as described in the Privacy Policy.

Back To Top