The Commercial Appeal

US awards $74M for battery recycling, reuse

Energy Dept.: Funds go to applicants in 7 states

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WASHINGTON – The Energy Department on Wednesday awarded nearly $74 million from the bipartisan infrastruc­ture law for 10 projects to advance recycling and reuse of batteries for electric vehicles and other purposes.

The funding will go to academic and commercial applicants in seven states, including four in California. Other grant winners are in Nevada, Michigan, New Jersey, Tennessee, Indiana and Alabama.

The University of California, San Diego will receive $10 million to develop and scale up technology to recycle lithium-ion batteries, while Element Energy in Menlo Park, California, will receive $7.9 million for a wind-energy project in west Texas. The company is working with Next Era Energy Resources to pursue commercial-scale technology to boost the second-life battery market for energy storage.

Sales of electric vehicles have skyrockete­d in the past two years and are expected to continue rising under the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture law signed last year and the climate-and-health law adopted in August.

“With demand for critical battery minerals, such as lithium and graphite, projected to increase by as much as 4,000% in the coming decades, this latest round of funding supports the recycling and reuse segment of the domestic battery supply chain,” the Energy Department

said. Officials hope the projects will help mitigate battery supply chain disruption­s and create jobs.

“Recycling advanced batteries presents an enormous opportunit­y for America to support the creation of a secure and resilient domestic battery supply chain to reach our clean energy and transporta­tion future,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm.

The announceme­nt follows $2.8 billion in grants awarded last month to boost domestic manufactur­ing of EV batteries. A total of 20 companies will receive grants for projects to extract and process battery materials, manufactur­e components and strengthen U.S. supply of critical minerals. The announceme­nts support President Joe Biden’s goal for electric vehicles to make up half of all new vehicle sales by 2030.

 ?? HAVEN DALEY/AP FILE ?? A charging cord is plugged into an electric vehicle in San Francisco. Sales of electric vehicles have skyrockete­d in the past two years.
HAVEN DALEY/AP FILE A charging cord is plugged into an electric vehicle in San Francisco. Sales of electric vehicles have skyrockete­d in the past two years.

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