Global Supply of Secondary Lithium from Lithium-Ion Battery Recycling
2025
Carolin Kresse | Britta Bookhagen | Laura Buarque Andrade | Max Frenzel
The recycling of lithium-ion batteries is picking up rather slowly, although recent rapid growth in consumption and increasing prevalence of battery electric vehicles have increased the quantity of recoverable material from past years of production. Yet, the diversity of different product types i.e., chemistries and product life spans complicates the recovery of raw materials. At present, large-scale industrial recycling of lithium-ion batteries employs (1) pyrometallurgy, with downstream hydrometallurgy for recovery of refined metals/salts: and (2) hydrometallurgy, requiring upstream mechanical shredding of cells and/or modules. Regulatory requirements, especially in Europe, and the high industry concentration along the lithium-ion battery value chain drive recycling efforts forward. The present study aims to quantify the potential contribution of 2nd lithium from recycling to battery production on a global and European scale up to 2050. The overall recycling output of lithium in any given year depends on the interactions between several different factors, including past production, battery lifetime distributions, and recovery rates, all of which are uncertain. The simplest way to propagate input uncertainties to the final results is to use Monte Carlo-type simulations. Calculations were done separately for EVs and portable batteries. The overall supply of lithium from recycling is the sum of the contributions from EVs and portable electronics from both the EU and the RoW in each battery production scenario. Results show a total global supply of recycled lithium below 20% in each scenario until 2050. On the EU level, the contribution of recycled lithium may reach up to 50% due to the high collection and recovery rate targets.
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