Critical Minerals Association
Critical Minerals Association
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2029Partners:Mkango Resources Ltd, Tyseley Energy Park Limited, Manufacturing Technology Centre (United Kingdom), Siemens (invalid org), Rolls-Royce Plc (UK) +16 partnersMkango Resources Ltd,Tyseley Energy Park Limited,Manufacturing Technology Centre (United Kingdom),Siemens (invalid org),Rolls-Royce Plc (UK),Beta Technology Limited,INTELLIGENT LIFECYCLE SOLUTIONS LIMITED,EMR,Echion Technologies,SF Xray,Advanced Alloy Services,CALPAC RESOURCES LIMITED,Centre for Process Innovation CPI (UK),British Standards Institution,University of Birmingham,Johnson Matthey,Minviro,P-Block,UTS,Critical Minerals Association,Dyson LimitedFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y53058X/1Funder Contribution: 6,430,850 GBPTechnology critical metals (TCMs) are pivotal to achieving Net Zero goals. These metals include for example lithium, cobalt, rare earths and platinum group metals. TCMs are deemed to be "critical" because they are economically important but at risk of short supply. The UK Government's Net Zero Strategy: "Build Back Greener" (2021) highlights the supply of these materials as a key challenge for the UK's energy transition and the need for a circular economy in these materials. They are used in wind-power, EV motors and batteries, LEDs, solar-cells and the hydrogen economy. The Government's (2022) Critical Minerals Strategy, "Resilience for the Future", emphasises the importance of these materials and the global supply-chain pressures. The UK's first critical mineral list identified 18 elements as TCMs (British Geological Survey, 2022). Currently, recycling rates for TCMs are very low, for example < 5% for neodymium , used in rare earth magnets ("Critical Raw Materials Resilience" EU report). There are a number of reasons for this, including a lack of specific incentives or legislation, current product designs often impede separation, in some applications there is a very low concentration of the critical material, often the value chains are fragmented, and current recycling processes, designed for bulk metals, are rather crude resulting in the finely distributed TCMs being lost in a linear economy. The overarching aim of RECREATE is to develop a circular economy for TCMs, keeping the materials or components in the highest value form with the lowest environmental footprint. The project brings together three of the leading research institutes in the UK (Universities of Birmingham, Leicester and Edinburgh) who each specialise in different technologies for the extraction and re-use or recycling of TCMs. The project includes leading industrial and public-sector players and policy makers, all involved in the drive to create a circular economy for critical materials in the UK. The research is informed by a system-wide perspective derived from a deep understanding of the industrial challenges for recycling of these materials, and of the governance structures that drive a circular economy. This project will undertake low TRL transformative research to generate radical improvements in automated sorting, "short loop" recycling, pyrometallurgical and chemical processes with reduced environmental impact, biological processes for dilute effluents, and new materials and product-designs which make re-use or recycling easier. Ultimately the project is developing a toolbox of technologies which can sense, sort, separate and re-use or recycle a broad range of TCMs from a wide range of products. These new technologies will be benchmarked using life cycle and techno economic assessment and the legislative drivers for a circular economy will be explored.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2025Partners:UNIVERSITY OF EXETER, The Coal Authority, University of Exeter, PV3 Technologies Ltd, Norwegian University of Science and Technology +77 partnersUNIVERSITY OF EXETER,The Coal Authority,University of Exeter,PV3 Technologies Ltd,Norwegian University of Science and Technology,EYDE Cluster,Cornwall Council,Bullitt,The Coal Authority,PV3 Technologies (United Kingdom),Circunomics,Cornwall Resources Limited,Celsa Steel UK,Department for International Trade,Beta Technology Limited,Critical Materials Institute,CB2tech Limited,Minviro,Roskill Information Services Ltd,Environment Agency,Bullitt,Levin Sources,Oakdene Hollins (United Kingdom),ENVIRONMENT AGENCY,Geothermal Engineering Ltd,HSSMI Ltd,LCM,Apto Solutions,Marine Minerals Ltd,EA,HSSMI Ltd,Less Common Metals Ltd,University of Exeter,Marine Minerals Ltd,Advanced Propulsion Centre,Cornwall Council,Minviro,Cobalt Institute,Cornish Lithium Ltd,Colorado School of Mines,UK Trade and Investment,Mkango Resources Limited,Satarla,Mkango Resources Limited,CSM,Celsa Steel UK,Cornwall Resources Limited,Cornish Mining World Heritage,Life Saver Power,Critical Materials Institute,Roskill Information Services Ltd,Geothermal Engineering Ltd,Cobalt Institute,Natural History Museum,Natural History Museum,Ravel,Circunomics,Norwegian University of Science and Technology Science and Technology,Cornish Mining World Heritage,Cornish Lithium Ltd,HyProMag,CB2tech Limited,DEFRA,Pact,Critical Minerals Association,Cobalt Institute,EYDE Cluster,Critical Minerals Association,Kite Air Ltd,Pact,HyProMag,Life Saver Power,NTNU (Norwegian Uni of Sci & Technology),Satarla,Ravel,Advanced Propulsion Centre UK Ltd (APC),Apto Solutions,Kite Air Ltd,Beta Technology Limited,Levin Sources,Mandalay Resources,Oakdene Hollins (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V011855/1Funder Contribution: 4,436,180 GBPThe Circular Economy (CE) is a revolutionary alternative to a traditional linear, make-use-dispose economy. It is based on the central principle of maintaining continuous flows of resources at their highest value for the longest period and then recovering, cascading and regenerating products and materials at the end of each life cycle. Metals are ideal flows for a circular economy. With careful stewardship and good technology, metals mined from the Earth can be reused indefinitely. Technology metals (techmetals) are an essential, distinct, subset of specialist metals. Although they are used in much smaller quantities than industrial metals such as iron and aluminium, each techmetal has its own specific and special properties that give it essential functions in devices ranging from smart phones, batteries, wind turbines and solar cells to electric vehicles. Techmetals are thus essential enablers of a future circular, low carbon economy and demand for many is increasing rapidly. E.g., to meet the UK's 2050 ambition for offshore wind turbines will require 10 years' worth of global neodymium production. To replace all UK-based vehicles with electric vehicles would require 200% of cobalt and 75% of lithium currently produced globally each year. The UK is 100% reliant on imports of techmetals including from countries that represent geopolitical risks. Some techmetals are therefore called Critical Raw Materials (high economic importance and high risk of supply disruption). Only four of the 27 raw materials considered critical by the EU have an end-of-life recycling input rate higher than 10%. Our UKRI TechMet CE Centre brings together for the first time world-leading researchers to maximise opportunities around the provision of techmetals from primary and secondary sources, and lead materials stewardship, creating a National Techmetals Circular Economy Roadmap to accelerate us towards a circular economy. This will help the UK meet its Industrial Strategy Clean Growth agenda and its ambitious UK 2050 climate change targets with secure and environmentally-acceptable supplies of techmetals. There are many challenges to a future techmetal circular economy. With growing demand, new mining is needed and we must keep the environmental footprint of this primary production as low as possible. Materials stewardship of techmetals is difficult because their fate is often difficult to track. Most arrive in the UK 'hidden' in complex products from which they are difficult to recover. Collection is inefficient, consumers may not feel incentivised to recycle, and policy and legislative initiatives such as Extended Producer Responsibility focus on large volume metals rather than small quantity techmetals. There is a lack of end-to-end visibility and connection between different parts of techmetal value chains. The TechMet consortium brings together the Universities of Exeter, Birmingham, Leicester, Manchester and the British Geological Survey who are already working on how to improve the raw materials cycle, manufacture goods to be re-used and recycled, recycle complex goods such as batteries and use and re-use equipment for as long as possible before it needs recycling. One of our first tasks is to track the current flows of techmetals through the UK economy, which although fundamental, is poorly known. The Centre will conduct new interdisciplinary research on interventions to improve each stage in the cycle and join up the value chain - raw materials can be newly mined and recycled, and manufacturing technology can be linked directly to re-use and recycling. The environmental footprint of our techmetals will be evaluated. Business, regulatory and social experts will recommend how the UK can best put all these stages together to make a new techmetals circular economy and produce a strategy for its implementation.
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