- Published: September 2024
- Pages: 393
- Tables: 116
- Figures: 55
The Critical Raw Materials (CRM) Recovery market is experiencing significant growth and transformation as the world shifts towards cleaner technologies and a circular economy. The market focuses on the extraction and recycling of materials deemed critical for advanced technologies, particularly those essential for the clean energy transition and digital revolution. The market encompasses various materials, including rare earth elements, lithium, cobalt, platinum group metals, and others. Key drivers of the CRM Recovery market include:
- Increasing demand for clean energy technologies like electric vehicles, wind turbines, and solar panels, which require substantial amounts of CRMs.
- Growing awareness of supply chain vulnerabilities and the need for resource security, especially given the geographic concentration of many CRM sources.
- Regulatory pressures promoting recycling and sustainable resource use, such as the EU's Critical Raw Materials Act.
- Advancements in recycling technologies making CRM recovery more economically viable.
Countries are ramping up efforts to increase and diversify critical raw materials supply and recovery, extraction and recycling are key components. The recently enacted European Union’s Critical Raw Materials Act, United Kingdom’s Critical Mineral Strategy (“UK CMS”) and the United States’ Inflation Reduction Act place significant emphasis on promoting extraction and processing projects, as well as recycling critical raw materials and rare earth elements. Major sources for recovery include:
- End-of-life products (e-waste, spent batteries, catalytic converters)
- Industrial production scrap
- Urban mining initiatives
- Landfill mining projects
Key technologies in the CRM Recovery market include hydrometallurgy, pyrometallurgy, bioleaching, and direct recycling methods. The choice of technology depends on the specific materials being recovered and the source. The CRM Recovery market is poised for substantial growth as it plays a crucial role in enabling the transition to a more sustainable and resilient global economy. The market is attracting increased investment and seeing the entry of both established players and innovative start-ups, driving technological advancements and expanding recovery capabilities. This comprehensive market research report provides an in-depth analysis of the global critical raw materials market from 2025 to 2040. Report contents include:
- Detailed market size forecasts in both volume (ktonnes) and value (USD billions) from 2025-2040
- Segmentation by material type, recovery source, and geographic region
- Analysis of 15+ critical materials including rare earth elements, lithium, cobalt, platinum group metals, and more
- Evaluation of primary and secondary (recycled) material sources
- Assessment of extraction and recovery technologies
- Profiles of 155+ key players in the CRM industry. Companies profiled include ACCUREC-Recycling GmbH, Ascend Elements, BANiQL, BASF, Ceibo, Cirba Solutions, Cyclic Materials, Enim, Heraeus Remloy, HyProMag, JPM Silicon GmbH, Librec AG, MagREEsource, NeoMetals, Noveon Magnetics, Phoenix Tailings, Posco, REEtec, Rivalia Chemical, SiTration, Sumitomo and Summit Nanotech.
- Global supply and trade dynamics for CRMs
- The circular economy and sustainable use of CRMs
- Critical and strategic materials used in the energy transition
- CRM Recovery in Semiconductors and Electronics: Types of CRMs found in e-waste; Concentration and value of CRMs in e-waste; Collection, sorting, and pre-processing technologies; Metal recovery technologies like pyrometallurgy, hydrometallurgy, and biometallurgy; Market forecasts for CRM recovery from electronics 2025-2040.
- CRM Recovery in Lithium-ion Batteries: Li-ion battery recycling value chain; Recycling processes for different cathode chemistries; Comparison of recycling techniques (hydrometallurgy, pyrometallurgy, direct recycling); Economic factors in battery recycling; Market forecasts for CRM recovery from batteries 2025-2040.
- Rare Earth Elements Recovery: REE recovery technologies; Comparison of recovery methods; REE recycling markets and players; Forecasts for REE recovery 2025-2040.
- Platinum Group Metals Recovery: PGM recovery from automotive catalysts; PGM recovery from fuel cells and electrolyzers; PGM recycling markets; Forecasts for PGM recovery 2025-2040
Critical raw materials are essential enablers of the clean energy transition and next-generation technologies. However, they face supply risks, price volatility, and sustainability concerns. This report provides businesses, investors, and policymakers with crucial intelligence on the rapidly evolving CRM market landscape.
Key questions answered include:
- What are the supply and demand projections for key CRMs through 2040?
- Which recovery technologies and sources will see the highest growth?
- How will recycling and urban mining impact primary CRM production?
- What are the economic factors driving CRM recovery from end-of-life products?
- Which geographic markets offer the greatest opportunities for CRM recovery?
- Who are the key players across the CRM value chain?
- What regulatory and sustainability trends will shape the market?
With detailed forecasts, technology assessments, and competitive analysis, this report offers an essential tool for strategy formulation in the critical materials sector. The shift towards clean energy and electrification is creating major market opportunities in CRM recovery and recycling. This comprehensive study provides the market intelligence needed to capitalize on the growing demand for sustainably-sourced critical raw materials.
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1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 21
- 1.1 Definition and Importance of Critical Raw Materials 21
- 1.2 E-Waste as a Source of Critical Raw Materials 23
- 1.3 Electrification, Renewable and Clean Technologies 24
- 1.4 Regulatory Landscape 26
- 1.4.1 European Union 26
- 1.4.2 United States 26
- 1.4.3 China 27
- 1.4.4 Japan 27
- 1.4.5 Australia 27
- 1.4.6 Canada 27
- 1.4.7 India 27
- 1.4.8 South Korea 27
- 1.4.9 Brazil 28
- 1.4.10 Russia 28
- 1.4.11 Global Initiatives 28
- 1.5 Key Market Drivers and Restraints 30
- 1.6 The Global Critical Raw Materials Market in 2024 32
- 1.7 Critical Material Extraction Technology 34
- 1.7.1 Recovery of critical materials from secondary sources (e.g., end-of-life products, industrial waste) 37
- 1.7.2 Critical rare-earth element recovery from secondary sources 38
- 1.7.3 Li-ion battery technology metal recovery 39
- 1.7.4 Critical semiconductor materials recovery 41
- 1.7.5 Critical semiconductor materials recovery 41
- 1.7.6 Critical platinum group metal recovery 43
- 1.7.7 Critical platinum Group metal recovery 44
- 1.8 Critical Raw Materials Value Chain 45
- 1.9 The Economic Case for Critical Raw Materials Recovery 46
- 1.10 Price Trends for Key Recovered Materials (2020-2024) 46
- 1.11 Global market forecasts 48
- 1.11.1 By Material Type (2025-2040) 48
- 1.11.2 By Recovery Source (2025-2040) 50
- 1.11.3 By Region (2025-2040) 52
2 INTRODUCTION 54
- 2.1 Critical Raw Materials 54
- 2.2 Global situation in supply and trade 55
- 2.3 Circular economy 55
- 2.3.1 Circular use of critical raw materials 57
- 2.4 Critical and strategic raw materials used in the energy transition 60
- 2.4.1 Greening critical metals 62
- 2.5 Metals and minerals processed and extracted 63
- 2.5.1 Copper 63
- 2.5.1.1 Global copper demand and trends 63
- 2.5.1.2 Markets and applications 64
- 2.5.1.3 Copper extraction and recovery 65
- 2.5.2 Nickel 66
- 2.5.2.1 Global nickel demand and trends 66
- 2.5.2.2 Markets and applications 66
- 2.5.2.3 Nickel extraction and recovery 68
- 2.5.3 Cobalt 69
- 2.5.3.1 Global cobalt demand and trends 69
- 2.5.3.2 Markets and applications 70
- 2.5.3.3 Cobalt extraction and recovery 71
- 2.5.4 Rare Earth Elements (REE) 72
- 2.5.4.1 Global Rare Earth Elements demand and trends 72
- 2.5.4.2 Markets and applications 72
- 2.5.4.3 Rare Earth Elements extraction and recovery 73
- 2.5.4.4 Recovery of REEs from secondary resources 74
- 2.5.5 Lithium 75
- 2.5.5.1 Global lithium demand and trends 75
- 2.5.5.2 Markets and applications 76
- 2.5.5.3 Lithium extraction and recovery 76
- 2.5.6 Gold 77
- 2.5.6.1 Global gold demand and trends 77
- 2.5.6.2 Markets and applications 78
- 2.5.6.3 Gold extraction and recovery 79
- 2.5.7 Uranium 79
- 2.5.7.1 Global uranium demand and trends 79
- 2.5.7.2 Markets and applications 80
- 2.5.7.3 Uranium extraction and recovery 80
- 2.5.8 Zinc 81
- 2.5.8.1 Global Zinc demand and trends 81
- 2.5.8.2 Markets and applications 82
- 2.5.8.3 Zinc extraction and recovery 83
- 2.5.9 Manganese 83
- 2.5.9.1 Global manganese demand and trends 83
- 2.5.9.2 Markets and applications 84
- 2.5.9.3 Manganese extraction and recovery 85
- 2.5.10 Tantalum 86
- 2.5.10.1 Global tantalum demand and trends 86
- 2.5.10.2 Markets and applications 86
- 2.5.10.3 Tantalum extraction and recovery 87
- 2.5.11 Niobium 88
- 2.5.11.1 Global niobium demand and trends 88
- 2.5.11.2 Markets and applications 88
- 2.5.11.3 Niobium extraction and recovery 89
- 2.5.12 Indium 90
- 2.5.12.1 Global indium demand and trends 90
- 2.5.12.2 Markets and applications 90
- 2.5.12.3 Indium extraction and recovery 91
- 2.5.13 Gallium 92
- 2.5.13.1 Global gallium demand and trends 92
- 2.5.13.2 Markets and applications 92
- 2.5.13.3 Gallium extraction and recovery 93
- 2.5.14 Germanium 93
- 2.5.14.1 Global germanium demand and trends 93
- 2.5.14.2 Markets and applications 94
- 2.5.14.3 Germanium extraction and recovery 94
- 2.5.15 Antimony 95
- 2.5.15.1 Global antimony demand and trends 95
- 2.5.15.2 Markets and applications 96
- 2.5.15.3 Antimony extraction and recovery 96
- 2.5.16 Scandium 97
- 2.5.16.1 Global scandium demand and trends 97
- 2.5.16.2 Markets and applications 97
- 2.5.16.3 Scandium extraction and recovery 98
- 2.5.17 Graphite 99
- 2.5.17.1 Global graphite demand and trends 99
- 2.5.17.2 Markets and applications 100
- 2.5.17.3 Graphite extraction and recovery 101
- 2.5.1 Copper 63
- 2.6 Recovery sources 102
- 2.6.1 Primary sources 104
- 2.6.2 Secondary sources 105
- 2.6.2.1 Extraction 108
- 2.6.2.1.1 Hydrometallurgical extraction 110
- 2.6.2.1.1.1 Overview 110
- 2.6.2.1.1.2 Lixiviants 111
- 2.6.2.1.1.3 SWOT analysis 112
- 2.6.2.1.2 Pyrometallurgical extraction 113
- 2.6.2.1.2.1 Overview 113
- 2.6.2.1.2.2 SWOT analysis 114
- 2.6.2.1.3 Biometallurgy 115
- 2.6.2.1.3.1 Overview 115
- 2.6.2.1.3.2 SWOT analysis 117
- 2.6.2.1.4 Ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents 118
- 2.6.2.1.4.1 Overview 118
- 2.6.2.1.4.2 SWOT analysis 120
- 2.6.2.1.5 Electroleaching extraction 122
- 2.6.2.1.5.1 Overview 122
- 2.6.2.1.5.2 SWOT analysis 122
- 2.6.2.1.6 Supercritical fluid extraction 124
- 2.6.2.1.6.1 Overview 124
- 2.6.2.1.6.2 SWOT analysis 124
- 2.6.2.2 Recovery 126
- 2.6.2.2.1 Solvent extraction 126
- 2.6.2.2.1.1 Overview 126
- 2.6.2.2.1.2 Rare-Earth Element Recovery 126
- 2.6.2.2.1.3 WOT analysis 128
- 2.6.2.2.2 Ion exchange recovery 129
- 2.6.2.2.2.1 Overview 129
- 2.6.2.2.2.2 SWOT analysis 131
- 2.6.2.2.3 Ionic liquid (IL) and deep eutectic solvent (DES) recovery 132
- 2.6.2.2.3.1 Overview 132
- 2.6.2.2.3.2 SWOT analysis 135
- 2.6.2.2.4 Precipitation 136
- 2.6.2.2.4.1 Overview 136
- 2.6.2.2.4.2 Coagulation and flocculation 137
- 2.6.2.2.4.3 SWOT analysis 139
- 2.6.2.2.5 Biosorption 140
- 2.6.2.2.5.1 Overview 140
- 2.6.2.2.5.2 SWOT analysis 142
- 2.6.2.2.6 Electrowinning 143
- 2.6.2.2.6.1 Overview 143
- 2.6.2.2.6.2 SWOT analysis 145
- 2.6.2.2.7 Direct materials recovery 146
- 2.6.2.2.1 Solvent extraction 126
- 2.6.2.2.7.1 Overview 146
-
- 2.6.2.2.7.2 Rare-earth Oxide (REO) Processing Using Molten Salt Electrolysis 147
- 2.6.2.2.7.3 Rare-earth Magnet Recycling by Hydrogen Decrepitation 147
- 2.6.2.2.7.4 Direct Recycling of Li-ion Battery Cathodes by Sintering 148
- 2.6.2.2.7.5 SWOT analysis 148
-
- 2.6.2.1.1 Hydrometallurgical extraction 110
3 CRITICAL RAW MATERIALS RECOVERY IN SEMICONDUCTORS 153
- 3.1 Critical semiconductor materials 153
- 3.2 Electronic waste (e-waste) 157
- 3.2.1 Types of Critical Raw Materials found in E-Waste 157
- 3.3 Photovoltaic and solar technologies 161
- 3.3.1 Common types of PV panels and their critical semiconductor components 161
- 3.3.2 Silicon Recovery Technology for Crystalline-Si PVs 162
- 3.3.3 Tellurium Recovery from CdTe Thin-Film Photovoltaics 162
- 3.3.4 Solar Panel Manufacturers and Recovery Rates 163
- 3.4 Concentration and value of Critical Raw Materials in E-Waste 163
- 3.5 Applications and Importance of Key Critical Raw Materials 164
- 3.6 Waste Recycling and Recovery Processes 165
- 3.7 Collection and Sorting Infrastructure 166
- 3.8 Pre-Processing Technologies 167
- 3.9 Metal Recovery Technologies 168
- 3.9.1 Pyrometallurgy 168
- 3.9.2 Hydrometallurgy 169
- 3.9.3 Biometallurgy 169
- 3.9.4 Supercritical Fluid Extraction 170
- 3.9.5 Electrokinetic Separation 170
- 3.9.6 Mechanochemical Processing 171
- 3.10 Global market 2025-2040 173
- 3.10.1 Ktonnes 175
- 3.10.2 Revenues 176
- 3.10.3 Regional 177
4 CRITICAL RAW MATERIALS RECOVERY IN LI-ION BATTERIES 179
- 4.1 Critical Li-ion Battery Metals 179
- 4.2 Critical Li-ion Battery Technology Metal Recovery 180
- 4.3 Lithium-Ion Battery recycling value chain 182
- 4.4 Black mass powder 185
- 4.5 Recycling different cathode chemistries 185
- 4.6 Preparation 186
- 4.7 Pre-Treatment 186
- 4.7.1 Discharging 186
- 4.7.2 Mechanical Pre-Treatment 186
- 4.7.3 Thermal Pre-Treatment 189
- 4.8 Comparison of recycling techniques 190
- 4.9 Hydrometallurgy 191
- 4.9.1 Method overview 191
- 4.9.1.1 Solvent extraction 193
- 4.9.2 SWOT analysis 193
- 4.9.1 Method overview 191
- 4.10 Pyrometallurgy 194
- 4.10.1 Method overview 194
- 4.10.2 SWOT analysis 195
- 4.11 Direct recycling 196
- 4.11.1 Method overview 196
- 4.11.1.1 Electrolyte separation 197
- 4.11.1.2 Separating cathode and anode materials 198
- 4.11.1.3 Binder removal 198
- 4.11.1.4 Relithiation 198
- 4.11.1.5 Cathode recovery and rejuvenation 199
- 4.11.1.6 Hydrometallurgical-direct hybrid recycling 200
- 4.11.2 SWOT analysis 200
- 4.11.1 Method overview 196
- 4.12 Other methods 201
- 4.12.1 Mechanochemical Pretreatment 201
- 4.12.2 Electrochemical Method 202
- 4.12.3 Ionic Liquids 202
- 4.13 Recycling of Specific Components 203
- 4.13.1 Anode (Graphite) 203
- 4.13.2 Cathode 203
- 4.13.3 Electrolyte 203
- 4.14 Recycling of Beyond Li-ion Batteries 204
- 4.14.1 Conventional vs Emerging Processes 204
- 4.14.2 Li-Metal batteries 205
- 4.14.3 Lithium sulfur batteries (Li–S) 206
- 4.14.4 All-solid-state batteries (ASSBs) 207
- 4.15 Economic case for Li-ion battery recycling 208
- 4.15.1 Metal prices 210
- 4.15.2 Second-life energy storage 211
- 4.15.3 LFP batteries 212
- 4.15.4 Other components and materials 212
- 4.15.5 Reducing costs 212
- 4.16 Competitive landscape 214
- 4.17 Global capacities, current and planned 214
- 4.18 Future outlook 216
- 4.19 Global market 2025-2040 216
- 4.19.1 Chemistry 218
- 4.19.2 Ktonnes 220
- 4.19.3 Revenues 222
- 4.19.4 Regional 224
5 CRITICAL RARE-EARTH ELEMENT RECOVERY 227
- 5.1 Introduction 227
- 5.2 Permanent magnet applications 228
- 5.3 Recovery technologies 229
- 5.3.1 Long-loop and short-loop recovery methods 231
- 5.3.2 Hydrogen decrepitation 232
- 5.3.3 Powder metallurgy (PM) 233
- 5.3.4 Long-loop magnet recycling 234
- 5.3.5 Solvent Extraction 235
- 5.3.6 Ion Exchange Resin Chromatography 236
- 5.3.7 Electrolysis and Metallothermic Reduction 237
- 5.4 Markets 240
- 5.4.1 Rare-earth magnet market 240
- 5.4.2 Rare-earth magnet recovery technology 241
- 5.5 Global market 2025-2040 245
- 5.5.1 Ktonnes 245
- 5.5.2 Revenues 246
6 CRITICAL PLATINUM GROUP METAL RECOVERY 247
- 6.1 Introduction 247
- 6.2 Supply chain 248
- 6.3 Prices 249
- 6.4 PGM Recovery 250
- 6.5 PGM recovery from spent automotive catalysts 253
- 6.6 PGM recovery from hydrogen electrolyzers and fuel cells 256
- 6.6.1 Green hydrogen market 256
- 6.6.2 PGM recovery from hydrogen-related technologies 256
- 6.6.3 Catalyst Coated Membranes (CCMs) 258
- 6.6.4 Fuel cell catalysts 259
- 6.6.5 Emerging technologies 261
- 6.6.5.1 Microwave-assisted Leaching 261
- 6.6.5.2 Supercritical Fluid Extraction 261
- 6.6.5.3 Bioleaching 262
- 6.6.5.4 Electrochemical Recovery 263
- 6.6.5.5 Membrane Separation 263
- 6.6.5.6 Ionic Liquids 264
- 6.6.5.7 Photocatalytic Recovery 264
- 6.6.6 Sustainability of the hydrogen economy 265
- 6.7 Markets 265
- 6.8 Global market 2025-2040 268
- 6.8.1 Ktonnes 268
- 6.8.2 Revenues 270
7 COMPANY PROFILES 271 (155 company profiles)
8 APPENDICES 385
- 8.1 Research Methodology 385
- 8.2 Glossary of Terms 386
- 8.3 List of Abbreviations 387
9 REFERENCES 388
List of Tables
- Table 1. List of Key Critical Raw Materials and Their Primary Applications. 21
- Table 2. Regulatory Landscape for Critical Raw Materials by Country/Region. 29
- Table 3. Key Market Drivers and Restraints in Critical Raw Materials Recovery. 30
- Table 4. Global Production of Critical Materials by Country (Top 10 Countries). 33
- Table 5. Projected Demand for Critical Materials in Clean Energy Technologies (2024-2040). 33
- Table 6. Value Proposition for Critical Material Extraction Technologies. 35
- Table 7. Critical Material Extraction Methods Evaluated by Key Performance Metrics. 37
- Table 8. Critical Rare-Earth Element Recovery Technologies from Secondary Sources. 38
- Table 9. Li-ion Battery Technology Metal Recovery Methods-Metal, Recovery Method, Recovery Efficiency, Challenges, Environmental Impact, Economic Viability. 40
- Table 10. Critical Semiconductor Materials Recovery-Material, Primary Source, Recovery Method, Recovery Efficiency, Challenges, Potential Applications. 41
- Table 11. Critical Semiconductor Material Recovery from Secondary Sources. 42
- Table 12. Critical Platinum Group Metal Recovery. 44
- Table 13. Price Trends for Key Recovered Materials (2020-2024). 47
- Table 14. Global critical raw materials recovery market by material types (2025-2040), by ktonnes. 48
- Table 15. Global critical raw materials recovery market by material types (2025-2040), by value (Billions USD). 49
- Table 16. Global critical raw materials recovery market by recovery source (2025-2040), in ktonnes. 50
- Table 17. Global critical raw materials recovery market by recovery source (2025-2040), by value (Billions USD). 51
- Table 18. Global critical raw materials recovery market by region (2025-2040), by ktonnes. 52
- Table 19. Global critical raw materials recovery market by region (2025-2040), by value (Billions USD). 53
- Table 20. Primary global suppliers of critical raw materials. 54
- Table 21. Current contribution of recycling to meet global demand of CRMs. 57
- Table 22. Applications and Importance of Key Critical Raw Materials. 60
- Table 23. Comparison of Recovery Rates for Different Critical Materials. 61
- Table 24. Markets and applications: copper. 64
- Table 25. Technologies and Techniques for Copper Extraction and Recovery. 65
- Table 26. Markets and applications: nickel. 67
- Table 27. Technologies and Techniques for Nickel Extraction and Recovery. 68
- Table 28. Markets and applications: cobalt. 70
- Table 29. Technologies and Techniques for Cobalt Extraction and Recovery. 71
- Table 30. Markets and applications: rare earth elements. 73
- Table 31. Technologies and Techniques for Rare Earth Elements Extraction and Recovery. 74
- Table 32. Markets and applications: lithium. 76
- Table 33. Technologies and Techniques for Lithium Extraction and Recovery. 77
- Table 34. Markets and applications: gold. 78
- Table 35. Technologies and Techniques for Gold Extraction and Recovery. 79
- Table 36. Markets and applications: uranium. 80
- Table 37. Technologies and Techniques for Uranium Extraction and Recovery. 81
- Table 38. Markets and applications: zinc. 82
- Table 39. Zinc Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 83
- Table 40. Markets and applications: manganese. 84
- Table 41. Manganese Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 85
- Table 42. Markets and applications: tantalum. 86
- Table 43. Tantalum Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 87
- Table 44. Markets and applications: niobium. 89
- Table 45. Niobium Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 89
- Table 46. Markets and applications: indium. 91
- Table 47. Indium Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 91
- Table 48. Markets and applications: gallium. 92
- Table 49. Gallium Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 93
- Table 50. Markets and applications: germanium. 94
- Table 51. Germanium Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 95
- Table 52. Markets and applications: antimony. 96
- Table 53. Antimony Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 97
- Table 54. Markets and applications: scandium. 98
- Table 55. Scandium Extraction and Recovery Technologies. 98
- Table 56. Graphite Markets and Applications. 100
- Table 57. Graphite Extraction and Recovery Techniques and Technologies. 101
- Table 58. Comparison of Primary vs Secondary Production for Key Materials. 103
- Table 59. Environmental Impact Comparison: Primary vs Secondary Production. 105
- Table 60. Technologies for critical material recovery from secondary sources. 105
- Table 61. Technologies for critical raw material recovery from secondary sources. 107
- Table 62. Critical raw material extraction technologies. 108
- Table 63. Pyrometallurgical extraction methods. 113
- Table 64. Bioleaching processes and their applicability to critical materials. 115
- Table 65. Comparative analysis of metal recovery technologies. 150
- Table 66. Technology readiness of critical material recovery technologies by secondary material sources. 151
- Table 67. Technology readiness of critical semiconductor recovery technologies. 154
- Table 68. Critical Semiconductors Applications and Recycling Rates. 156
- Table 69. Types of critical raw Materials found in E-Waste. 157
- Table 70. E-waste Generation and Recycling Rates. 160
- Table 71. Critical Semiconductor Recovery from Photovoltaics. 161
- Table 72. Solar Panel Manufacturers and Their Recycling Capabilities. 163
- Table 73. Concentration and Value of Critical Raw Materials in E-waste. 164
- Table 74. Critical Semiconductor Materials and Their Applications. 165
- Table 75. Critical Materials Waste Recycling and Recovery Processes. 166
- Table 76. Collection and Sorting Infrastructure for Critical Materials Recycling. 166
- Table 77. Pre-Processing Technologies for Critical Materials Recycling. 167
- Table 78. Global recovered critical raw electronics material, 2025-2040 (ktonnes). 175
- Table 79. Global recovered critical raw electronics material market, 2025-2040 (billions USD). 176
- Table 80. Recovered critical raw electronics material market, by region, 2025-2040 (ktonnes). 177
- Table 81. Drivers for Recycling Li-ion Batteries. 179
- Table 82. Li-ion Battery Metal Recovery Technologies. 180
- Table 83. Li-ion battery recycling value chain. 182
- Table 84. Typical lithium-ion battery recycling process flow. 184
- Table 85. Main feedstock streams that can be recycled for lithium-ion batteries. 184
- Table 86. Comparison of LIB recycling methods. 190
- Table 87. Comparison of conventional and emerging processes for recycling beyond lithium-ion batteries. 205
- Table 88. Economic assessment of battery recycling options. 209
- Table 89. Retired lithium-batteries. 213
- Table 90. Global capacities, current and planned (tonnes/year). 214
- Table 91. Global lithium-ion battery recycling market in tonnes segmented by cathode chemistry, 2025-2040. 218
- Table 92. Global Li-ion battery recycling market, 2025-2040 (ktonnes) 220
- Table 93. Global Li-ion battery recycling market, 2025-2040 (billions USD). 222
- Table 94. Li-ion battery recycling market, by region, 2025-2040 (ktonnes). 225
- Table 95. Critical rare-earth elements markets and applications. 227
- Table 96. Primary and Secondary Material Streams for Rare-Earth Element Recovery. 229
- Table 97. Critical rare-earth element recovery technologies. 230
- Table 98. Rare Earth Element Content in Secondary Material Sources. 231
- Table 99. Comparison of Short-loop and Long-loop Rare Earth Recovery Methods. 232
- Table 100. Long-loop Rare-Earth Magnet Recycling Technologies. 234
- Table 101. Rare Earth Element Demand by Application. 240
- Table 102. Global rare-earth magnet key players in a table 241
- Table 103. Rare Earth Magnet Recycling Value Chain. 241
- Table 104.Technology readiness of REE recovery technologies in a table 244
- Table 105. Global recovered critical rare-earth element market, 2025-2040 (ktonnes) 245
- Table 106. Global recovered critical rare-earth element market, 2025-2040 (billions USD). 246
- Table 107. Global PGM Demand Segmented by Application. 247
- Table 108. Critical Platinum Group Metals: Applications and Recycling Rates. 250
- Table 109. Technology Readiness of Critical PGM Recovery from Secondary Sources. 252
- Table 110. Automotive Catalyst Recycling Players. 256
- Table 111. Challenges in transitioning to new PEMEL catalysts and the role of PGM recycling in a table. 257
- Table 112. Key Suppliers of Catalysts for Fuel Cells. 260
- Table 113. Global recovered critical platinum group metal market, 2025-2040 (ktonnes) 268
- Table 114. Global recovered critical platinum group metal market, 2025-2040 (billions USD). 270
- Table 115. Glossary of terms. 386
- Table 116. List of Abbreviations. 387
List of Figures
- Figure 1. TRL of critical material extraction technologies. 35
- Figure 2. Critical Raw Materials Value Chain. 46
- Figure 3. Global critical raw materials recovery market by material types (2025-2040), by ktonnes. 48
- Figure 4. Global critical raw materials recovery market by material types (2025-2040), by value (Billions USD). 49
- Figure 5. Global critical raw materials recovery market by recovery source (2025-2040), by ktonnes. 50
- Figure 6. Global critical raw materials recovery market by recovery source (2025-2040), by value. 51
- Figure 7. Global critical raw materials recovery market by region (2025-2040), by ktonnes. 53
- Figure 8. Global critical raw materials recovery market by region (2025-2040), by value (Billions USD). 53
- Figure 9. Conceptual diagram illustrating the Circular Economy. 57
- Figure 10. Circular Economy Model for Critical Materials. 59
- Figure 11. Copper demand outlook. 63
- Figure 12. Global nickel demand outlook. 66
- Figure 13. Global cobalt demand outlook. 70
- Figure 14. Global lithium demand outlook. 75
- Figure 15. Global graphite demand outlook. 100
- Figure 16. Solvent extraction (SX) in hydrometallurgy. 111
- Figure 17. SWOT analysis: hydrometallurgical extraction. 113
- Figure 18. SWOT analysis: pyrometallurgical extraction of critical materials. 115
- Figure 19. SWOT analysis: biometallurgy for critical material extraction. 118
- Figure 20. SWOT analysis: ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents for critical material extraction. 121
- Figure 21. SWOT analysis: electrochemical leaching for critical material extraction. 124
- Figure 22. SWOT analysis: supercritical fluid extraction technology. 126
- Figure 23. SWOT analysis: solvent extraction recovery technology. 129
- Figure 24. SWOT analysis: ion exchange resin recovery technology. 132
- Figure 25. SWOT analysis: ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents for critical material recovery. 136
- Figure 26. SWOT analysis: precipitation for critical material recovery. 140
- Figure 27. SWOT analysis: biosorption for critical material recovery. 143
- Figure 28. SWOT analysis: electrowinning for critical material recovery. 146
- Figure 29. SWOT analysis: direct critical material recovery technology. 150
- Figure 30. Global Li-ion battery recycling market, 2025-2040 (chemistry). 174
- Figure 31. Global recovered critical raw electronics materials market, 2025-2040 (ktonnes) 175
- Figure 32. Global recovered critical raw electronics material market, 2025-2040 (Billion USD). 176
- Figure 33. Recovered critical raw electronics material market, by region, 2025-2040 (ktonnes). 178
- Figure 34. Typical direct, pyrometallurgical, and hydrometallurgical recycling methods for recovery of Li-ion battery active materials. 183
- Figure 35. Mechanical separation flow diagram. 187
- Figure 36. Recupyl mechanical separation flow diagram. 188
- Figure 37. Flow chart of recycling processes of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). 191
- Figure 38. Hydrometallurgical recycling flow sheet. 192
- Figure 39. SWOT analysis for Hydrometallurgy Li-ion Battery Recycling. 194
- Figure 40. Umicore recycling flow diagram. 195
- Figure 41. SWOT analysis for Pyrometallurgy Li-ion Battery Recycling. 196
- Figure 42. Schematic of direct recyling process. 197
- Figure 43. SWOT analysis for Direct Li-ion Battery Recycling. 201
- Figure 44. Schematic diagram of a Li-metal battery. 206
- Figure 45. Schematic diagram of Lithium–sulfur battery. 207
- Figure 46. Schematic illustration of all-solid-state lithium battery. 208
- Figure 47. Global scrapped EV (BEV+PHEV) forecast to 2040. 217
- Figure 48. Global Li-ion battery recycling market, 2025-2040 (chemistry). 219
- Figure 49. Global Li-ion battery recycling market, 2025-2040 (ktonnes) 221
- Figure 50. Global Li-ion battery recycling market, 2025-2040 (Billion USD). 223
- Figure 51. Global Li-ion battery recycling market, by region, 2025-2040 (ktonnes). 226
- Figure 52. Global recovered critical rare-earth element market, 2025-2040 (ktonnes) 245
- Figure 53. Global recovered critical rare-earth element market, 2025-2040 (Billion USD). 246
- Figure 54. Global recovered critical platinum group metal market, 2025-2040 (ktonnes) 269
- Figure 55. Global recovered critical platinum group metal market, 2025-2040 (Billion USD). 270
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