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Stellantis to enter joint venture with Orano to recycle EV batteries

They'll recover 'black mass' (which is battery materials, not a satanic ritual)

ROME — Franco-Italian automaker Stellantis said on Tuesday it planned a joint venture with French nuclear fuels firm Orano to recycle used electric vehicle batteries and scrap materials from its gigafactories in Europe and North America.

The two companies said in a statement they had signed a memorandum of understanding leading to the joint venture, subject to agreement on definitive documentation.

No financial details were provided.

The deal will give Stellantis, parent company of brands including Peugeot, Fiat and Jeep, additional access to the cobalt, nickel and lithium necessary for electrification and the energy transition, the statement said.

It said Orano's technology allows the recovery of all materials used in lithium-ion batteries, with recovery rates of metals that can go above 90%, and the manufacturing of new cathode materials.

The joint venture will produce materials also known as "black mass" or "active mass," which is shredded battery material containing high amounts of lithium, manganese, cobalt, and nickel metals. That material might be refined in Orano's new plant in Dunkirk, France, so that they can be re-used in batteries, "thus closing the loop of a circular economy," the two companies said.

Production, which will serve Stellantis facilities, will start in the first part of 2026, they added.

 

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