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JLR, Altilium to test EV batteries made with recycled materials

British recycling company Altilium and Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) will develop and check battery cells used recycled products from old Jaguar iPace electrical automobiles in a pilot task to show recycled battery production is possible at scale.

Part-funded by Tata Motors unit JLR, Altilium and the UK state-backed Advanced Propulsion Centre, the job will run over the course of the next year and take cathode active materials from utilized i-Pace batteries and make brand-new cells for screening in brand-new JLR EVs.

The rise in EVs has brought with it a race to recycle the important minerals in their batteries - mostly lithium, cobalt and nickel - which can be worth countless euros per cars and truck, and counter China's dominance of this field.

There is also regulative pressure on automakers and battery makers to recycle.

From 2031, brand-new EV batteries offered into the European Union must consist of a minimum of 6% recycled lithium, 6% recycled nickel and 16% recycled cobalt. By 2036 these targets increase to 12%, 15% and 26%, respectively.

Altilium states that its procedure ought to also assist car manufacturers struck co2 reduction targets, as it decreases the requirement for freshly mined materials resulting in a 60% drop in carbon emissions.

Earlier this year, SQM Lithium Ventures, the corporate endeavor arm of Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile's (SQM). lithium organization, supplied most of a $12 million. Series A financing round for Altilium.

That followed a $2.6 million investment by SQM, the world's. second-largest lithium producer, in Altilium last year.

(source: Reuters)