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Why are miners diversifying into metals and minerals recycling?

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South African-based mining company Sibanye-Stillwater is one of the world’s largest primary producers of platinum, palladium and rhodium, as well as a top-tier gold producer. Perhaps surprisingly, it is also a large recycler, processing 310,000oz of platinum group metals in 2023 – representing 13.3% of the company’s revenue.

Last year, Sibanye-Stillwater expanded its recycling portfolio with the acquisition of industrial and electronic waste recycler Abington Reldan Metals. The US-based company produces both green precious and base metals through a range of services including aggregation, collection, dismantling, processing, shredding and transportation.

Sibanye-Stillwater was an early mover in what is now a growing trend of miners diversifying into the recycling sector. Whether it is through acquiring equity stakes in recycling companies, establishing joint ventures or funding the development of proprietary technologies, several global miners are tentatively dipping their toes into the metals and minerals recycling industry.

Miners look beyond mines for metals

In December at Resourcing Tomorrow in London, Laurent Charbonnier, the chief commercial and development officer at Sibanye-Stillwater, said: “Companies are starting to look at where the metals are, and not just where the mines are.”

They include multinational mining company Glencore – a long-standing recycler of end-of-life electronics, lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries and other critical metal-containing products – which last year invested $75m (SFr68.16m) in Li-Cycle, a Li-ion battery resource recovery company. In September, the Anglo-Swiss company also formed a partnership with Strategic Metals to explore US-based downstream processing of cobalt and copper intermediate products from the La Cobaltera project in Chile.

Meanwhile, in 2023, Rio Tinto paid $700m to buy a 50% equity stake in scrap metal recycler Matalco from Giampaolo Group. The company has six facilities producing around 900,000t of recycled aluminium per annum. At the time, Rio Tinto said the investment would expand its aluminium business in the US, “where demand for the recycled material is forecast to increase by more than 70% from 2022 to 2032, driven by the transportation, construction and packaging sectors”.

Similarly, in 2023 Albemarle Corporation committed $1.3bn to its US-based Mega-Flex Processing Facility for lithium recycling from batteries. The facility was expected to produce approximately 50,000t of battery-grade lithium hydroxide from multiple sources, with the potential to expand up to 100,000t. Construction was initially slated to begin in 2024, but Albemarle has rephased some of its capital investment plans, including those for the proposed Richburg facility, due to market conditions.