The Courier-Journal (Louisville)

New battery recycling facility will deepen Kentucky’s ties to the electric vehicle sector

- Bruce Schreiner

A recycling facility will be built in Kentucky to shred electric vehicle batteries in a $65 million venture between American and South Korean companies that will supply material for a separate battery-related operation in the same town, the companies have announced.

The 100,000-square-foot EV battery recycling facility to be built in Hopkinsvil­le will create about 60 jobs, according to U.S.-based Ascend Elements, which is partnering with South Korea-based SK ecoplant and its electronic-waste recycling subsidiary, TES, on the project. Constructi­on is set to begin in November and be completed in January 2025. Hopkinsvil­le is 170 miles southwest of Louisville.

“This is just the beginning of an entirely new industry in the United States,” Mike O’Kronley, CEO of Ascend Elements, said in a news release. “For every new EV battery gigafactor­y that is built, we will need to build a new battery recycling facility to process manufactur­ing scrap and end-of-life batteries.”

The recycling facility will disassembl­e and shred about 24,000 metric tons of used EV batteries and gigafactor­y scrap per year – or approximat­ely 56,000 EV batteries yearly, the company said. The exact location for the new facility hasn’t been determined, it said.

SK ecoplant will be the majority owner, holding 64% of the new joint venture, with Ascend Elements owning 25% and TES owning 11%, according to the release. Since 2022, SK ecoplant has invested more than $60 million in Massachuse­tts-based Ascend Elements. “This is a capital intensive endeavor, so joint ventures between strategica­lly aligned partners is an ideal way to fund new infrastruc­ture projects,” O’Kronley said.

The new facility each year will produce about 12,000 metric tons of black mass – a powder that contains the valuable cathode and anode materials inside an electric vehicle battery, the company said.

Black mass produced at the new recycling facility will help supply Ascend Elements’ nearby Apex 1 engineered battery materials facility, a $1 billion project currently under constructi­on in Hopkinsvil­le that will employ 400 workers. At full capacity, the project will produce enough engineered cathode material for about 750,000 new electric vehicles per year, the company said.

Ascend Elements said it recently closed a $542 million funding round and received $480 million in U.S. Department of Energy grant awards to accelerate constructi­on of the Apex 1 project. Ascend Elements also has a battery recycling facility in Covington, Georgia, and a battery laboratory in Novi, Michigan.

The recycling facility in Hopkinsvil­le will deepen Kentucky’s connection­s to the emerging EV sector.

“We’ve become the EV battery capital of the United States of America and the jobs keep pouring in,” Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said in a social media video Tuesday.

During Beshear’s term, Kentucky has landed nearly $11 billion in privatesec­tor investment­s and more than 10,000 jobs in the EV sector, the governor’s office said. In the biggest project, Ford and its battery partner, SK Innovation of South Korea, are building twin battery plants outside Glendale in central Kentucky. The $5.8 billion megaprojec­t will create 5,000 jobs to produce batteries for the automaker’s next generation of electric vehicles.

In the U.S., electric vehicle sales continued to rise during the first half of the year to more than 557,000 vehicles, or 7.2% of all new vehicle sales. The EV share of the market last year was 5.8% with just over 807,000 sales. Industry analysts predict continued growth in EV sales for the next decade or more.

 ?? ASCEND ELEMENTS VIA AP ?? Team members load used electric vehicle battery modules onto a massive shredder at the Ascend Elements battery recycling facility in Covington, Ga. A recycling facility will be built in Hopkinsvil­le, Ky., to shred electric vehicle batteries in a $65 million venture between American and South Korean companies, Ascend Elements and SK ecoplant, respective­ly, that will supply material for a separate battery-related operation in the same town, the companies announced Tuesday.
ASCEND ELEMENTS VIA AP Team members load used electric vehicle battery modules onto a massive shredder at the Ascend Elements battery recycling facility in Covington, Ga. A recycling facility will be built in Hopkinsvil­le, Ky., to shred electric vehicle batteries in a $65 million venture between American and South Korean companies, Ascend Elements and SK ecoplant, respective­ly, that will supply material for a separate battery-related operation in the same town, the companies announced Tuesday.

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