What about copper, gold & silver, these all recycle well and at profit? Sorry Swills, it's too broad and sweeping a statement for my taste. More akin to plain nonsense tbh.Swwils wrote: ↑Tue Aug 29, 2023 7:55 am The colbalt in some chemistries makes it profitable to recover, if it's a LFP cell then the lithium will always be cheaper, and less energy intensive to mine - LFP also no colbalt to boost the recovery value either.
We could recycle 100% of everything if we fired it into the sun, but again key is in the details and timeframe.
Many of these recycling schemes don't even need to run a TCLP. There is no way to lose! The nasty metals magically disappear! Conveniently avoiding the fact that "recycling "a battery requires so much more fossil energy than just making a new one.
Can you even imagine running a battery recycling operation? Who would insure you for fire? One incident and the entire benefit will be gone, ontop of making no profit unless subsidised.
The only successful recycling ever has been clean corrugated cardboard, aluminium and steel.
I've seen plastic recycling working to support families in India slums, been in them watching it work. Sterling and chipboard, clothing recycling all the way down to rag bales. Every single compost heap that was turned onto a patch. Just a selection, my personal favourite is the eggshell waste from chickens.
I am optimistic for the LFP and similar recycling turning a profit and most of all landfill avoidance.
I would hope that a recycling plant running on a WT tarrif would be able to massively reduce the FF cost of the black mass extract. What percentage of the sulphuric acid and other chemical additions could be reused longterm, who knows. The industry appears to relatively young. I hope it grows well and increases its efficiency over time.