What to Know Before Buying a Used Electric Car (2026 Guide)

More

BMW iX3 Crowned 2026 World Car of the Year and World Electric Vehicle

More

Kia EV2 Debuts as Compact Electric SUV Built for Europe

More

New Xiaomi SU7 Debuts With 902 km Range, Ultra-Fast Charging

More

Truemag

  • Electric Car News
  • Electric Car Reviews
  • Plug-in Hybrids
  • Technology
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise
  • Charging Map

Redwood Materials Partners with Ultium Cells

Redwood Materials is partnering Ultium Cells LLC—the joint battery cell manufacturing venture between General Motors and LG Energy Solution— to recycle production scrap from both their Warren, Ohio and Spring Hill, Tennessee facilities. Materials to be recycled include cathode and anode material as well as cell scrap.

Ultium Cells’ two facilities are each 2.8 million-square-feet operations that expect to produce more than 80 GWh combined of battery cells annually, with Redwood receiving the majority of the scrap from its manufacturing process.

Ultium is already shipping material from Gigafactories in Ohio and Tennessee and the company has a third facility under construction in Michigan. With this latest collaboration, Redwood now has contracts with most of North America’s battery cell manufacturers.

Despite tremendously efficient production rates, cell manufacturing still experiences a 5-10% scrap rate on average. This equates to daily truckloads full of material, and ~10,000 tons of material annually, for Redwood to recycle and remanufacture into critical battery components for cell manufacturing.

Compared to traditional methods of processing mined ore into battery-grade materials, Reedwood’s approach is significantly more sustainable. Redwood uses 80% less energy, generates 70% less CO2 emissions, and requires 80% less water, setting new standards in resource efficiency.

Reedwood’s hydrometallurgy facility, the first commercial-scale nickel “mine” to open in the United States in a decade, not only recycles battery manufacturing scrap into raw nickel and cobalt but also stands as the only commercial-scale source of lithium supply to come online in the U.S. in decades.

In April, Redwood said that it had reached a recycling capacity of 40,000 tonnes, which corresponds to 15 to 20 GWh of battery capacity.

May 25, 2024Blagojce Krivevski
New FLO Ultra charger can charge an EV to 80% in 15 minutesDaimler Truck North America Provides Second Life to EV Batteries
You Might Also Like
 
LG Energy Solution and GM to build second Ultium Cells battery plant
 
Ford, Redwood Materials Teaming Up on Closed-Loop Battery Recycling, U.S. Supply Chain
Blagojce Krivevski

Blagojce Krivevski is physicist and green technology lover. Keep in touch with Blagojce through his email, web site, Twitter, Linkedin, Facebook and Google+.

May 25, 2024 Electric Car NewsRedwood Materials, Ultium Cells, Ultium Cells LLC
Follow Us
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • google-news
  • linkedin
  • youtube
  • instagram
  • pinterest
  • rss
Recent News
XCharge North America and JOJO Superfast Launch High-Power EV Charging Network in Illinois
April 5, 2026
Volvo Tests Hydrogen Combustion Trucks with HPDI Technology
April 5, 2026
What to Know Before Buying a Used Electric Car (2026 Guide)
April 4, 2026
Mercedes-Benz EQS Introduces Steer-by-Wire Technology
April 4, 2026
Kia PV5 Crew Debuts: Flexible Electric Van for Passenger and Cargo Use
April 3, 2026
About
ElectricCarsReport.com ElectricCarsReport.com is a website dedicated to pure electric vehicles and the full range of consumer information and tools about electric cars, green technology energy, and the environment.
Latest News
XCharge North America and JOJO Superfast Launch High-Power EV Charging Network in Illinois
April 5, 2026
Volvo Tests Hydrogen Combustion Trucks with HPDI Technology
April 5, 2026
What to Know Before Buying a Used Electric Car (2026 Guide)
April 4, 2026
Get in touch

Email: contact@electriccarsreport.com

Get new stories by email:
Archives
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • google-news
  • linkedin
  • youtube
  • instagram
  • pinterest
  • rss
DMCA.com
© ElectricCarsReport.com | All Rights Reserved.