Shanghai Daily

Plant to lift precious metals’ recycling

- Yuan Luhang METAL

HERAEUS’ most advanced precious metals processing plant in Nanjing will recycle and refine precious metals and help China to reduce its reliance on imports of the metals, the German company said yesterday.

The US$120 million 84,000 square meter plant, equivalent to almost 12 football fields, will quintuple the company’s recycling capacity and triple its supply of precious metals, easing their insufficie­nt supply in the Chinese market. The demand for precious metals in China is 25 times the supply now, according to Heraeus.

As China has to depend on imports to meet the demand for precious metals, the new plant will lower its dependency on imports of such metals, Heraeus said of its biggest investment in the country.

“Now the production of precious metals in South Africa is decreasing, and the global supply will be affected, which means the price of precious metals is uncertain,” said Andre Christl, president of Heraeus Precious Metals.

So to recycle and refine precious metals and put them in the Chinese market is significan­t to China, Christl added.

The recycling and reproducti­on of precious metals will become more important in the future as the energy consumptio­n and emission of carbon dioxide is lower than the exploitati­on of precious metals, Heraeus said.

Precious metals such as the platinum group of metals are widely used in the automotive, electronic­s, petrochemi­cals and pharmaceut­ical industries.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China