What happens when millions of electric car batteries get old?

California has no EV-battery recycling plants, and few plans for coming toxic 
flood.

By MARTIN WISCKOL | PUBLISHED: January 27, 2022 at 9:21 a.m. | UPDATED: January 
27, 2022 at 9:30 a.m.
https://www.siliconvalley.com/2022/01/27/what-happens-when-millions-of-electric-car-batteries-get-old/


As California accelerates its push toward 100% zero-emission new car sales by 
2035, hundreds of thousands of electric-vehicle batteries will be finishing 
their freeway lives — and it’s not clear what’s going to happen to them.

Currently, many of the massive used batteries — the Tesla version weighs about 
900 pounds — appear to be stockpiled in hopes of greater reuse and recycling 
markets. But eventually those batteries, along with the toxic chemicals that 
can leach out of them, could end up in hazardous waste landfills.

There are no EV-battery recycling plants in California, and only five up and 
running nationwide, according to CalEPA.

That’s despite the fact that used lithium-ion batteries contain valuable 
minerals that otherwise must be mined from the earth, mostly from overseas 
operations.

“There still aren’t enough people who understand (retired) batteries well 
enough to responsibly handle them,” said Zora Chung, co-founder of Signal 
Hill’s ReJoule Inc. “Ultimately, we need  more education, and to have a more 
efficient marketplace to re-deploy these batteries into a second-life 
application.”

Chung’s EV-battery diagnostic company has launched a state-funded pilot project 
to adapt the used batteries for solar storage, a repurposing that could extend 
their lives by a decade or more — and forestall actual dismantling and 
recycling.

ReJoule’s nascent effort reflects a growing awareness of the battery dilemma 
hurtling down the pike.

Thanks to its progressive environmental policies, California currently accounts 
for 42% of the nation’s electric vehicles.

And, for several years, state legislators have recognized the potential toxic  
consequences posed by the battery-powered vehicles.

Assembly Bill 2832, signed into law in 2018, called for an electric vehicle 
advisory group to develop legislative and regulatory recommendations to ensure 
that “as close to 100% as possible of lithium-ion batteries in the state are 
reused or recycled at end-of-life.”

That group’s 19 members include regulators, automakers, waste and recycling 
interests, environmentalists, and a battery trade group. After 2 1/2 years, it 
completed a draft report in December and are taking public comments on the 
recommendations until February 16, at which point the document will be 
finalized and forwarded to the Legislature for action.

But some say the proposals are only a beginning, and that the broad range of 
interests represented on the group made it impossible to win majority approval 
for key items.

“The report identifies several policy solutions that have been proven to work 
for other products in California and for batteries in countries around the 
world,” said Nick Lapis, a member of the panel who represents Californians 
Against Waste, a nonprofit environmental research and advocacy organization.

“However, I think the policies that would actually solve the problem didn’t 
garner a consensus.”

Obstacle course ahead

The state was home to 636,000 light-duty, zero-emission vehicles by the end of 
2020. The tally by the California Energy Commission includes 369,000 electric 
vehicles, 259,000 plug-in hybrids and 7,000 fuel cell vehicles.

While that was by far the most of any state, it was only 2.3% of all 
California’s light-duty vehicles.

That number needs to grow quickly if California is to reach its 2035 goal of 
100% zero-emission new light-vehicle sales. (The state has set the 100% goal 
for medium- and heavy-duty trucks at 2045.)

In 2019, before the pandemic dampened new-car availability, 2 million new cars 
were sold in the state, according to the California New Car Dealers 
Association. That means 2 million or more new EVs should be hitting the road 
annually in 13 years, with steady growth in annual sales in the meantime.

Significant challenges remain for getting all Californians in zero-emission 
cars, such as creating creating electric-vehicle charging options for people 
who live in apartments.

But obstacles to reusing and recycling the batteries in those cars could prove 
even greater, in part because there hasn’t yet been much need for developing 
used-battery markets and regulations.

With the average car on the road for about 12 years and electric vehicles just 
gaining traction in the last half dozen years — Tesla’s Model X came out in 
2015 — it hasn’t been an major issue. There just haven’t been that many 
batteries retired so far.

Those batteries that have reached the end of their lives have not been closely 
tracked, and it’s not clear what happens to them. One common scenario finds the 
aging or wrecked electric vehicle ending up at auction, where it’s purchased by 
a dismantler for parts.

“Those batteries may be stockpiled, awaiting better economics for recycling or 
resale,” said Alissa Kendall, a UC Davis engineering professor and lead author 
of the state’s draft report. Or perhaps they’re recycled out of state — or out 
of the country, she said. Or maybe they find their way into the hands of 
hobbyists.

“We just don’t know,” Kendall said.

The report envisions many used batteries being repurposed for electrical 
storage — such as storing solar energy for when the sun isn’t shining — before 
they’re actually taken apart and recycled. It notes ReJoule is one of four 
state-subsidized pilot projects to develop methods for such repurposing.

When a battery no longer provides the desired range for a car, it can have 
another decade of use for electrical storage, according to the report.

But sooner or later, most batteries will have to be dismantled and recycled — 
or disposed of as hazardous waste.

One recycling technique is a pyrometallurgical smelting process to extract 
valuable minerals from the battery cathode. The drawback is that it recovers 
only a portion of the desired materials — and none of the valuable lithium — 
and can result in carbon emissions.

Perhaps more promising in terms of mineral capture and environmental 
sensitivity is a hydrometallurgical chemical leaching process.

But while the technology is evolving to determine the best approach, a bigger 
hurdle may be California’s strict environmental regulations — especially 
because the batteries qualify as hazardous waste.

For instance, hazardous waste treatment permits take an average of two years 
for approval and the last new hazardous facility was approved eight years ago, 
according to the report. So there are no recent models for the most efficient 
way to negotiate a cumbersome regulatory process.

“I think (battery recycling is) a lot farther away from a policy standpoint 
than from a technological standpoint,” said Hanjiro Ambrose, a UC Davis 
researcher who was the state panel’s lead advisor.

No quick fixes

Beside there being no thorough process to track EV batteries, there’s no system 
to coordinate their collection, post-car reuse or disposal once the warranty 
runs out, the report says.

“Without a mechanism to collect stranded batteries, they may be unsafely 
accumulated, illegally abandoned, or improperly managed domestically and 
abroad,” it says.

A key recommendation is assigning responsibility for making sure the batteries 
are reused, repurposed or recycled. That responsibility would fall to the 
battery supplier if the battery is still under warranty, the dismantler if the 
car has reached its end of life, or the vehicle manufacturer if the retired car 
does not go to a dismantler.

A proposal to make the vehicle manufacturer responsible for most, if not all, 
batteries at their end of life — including covering recycling costs —  didn’t 
muster a majority vote, although the Legislature could consider taking up such 
a bill.

An environmental handling fee, to be collected at the time of vehicle purchase, 
was also rejected.

The host of other approved recommendations include labeling the batteries so 
that recyclers know exactly what’s inside, providing economic incentives to 
recyclers, and supporting the development of domestic battery manufacturing, as 
most are now made overseas.

Importing the huge batteries results in a significant carbon footprint, and 
overseas mining for battery materials has raised both environmental and labor 
issues, including child labor.

But the 89-page report, dense with findings and recommendations that took 2 1/2 
years to develop and will now require either new legislation or new 
regulations, offers no quick fixes.

Even practical and welcomed efforts already underway, such as ReJoule’s pilot 
project to repurpose the batteries for solar storage, are hardly having an easy 
go of it.

ReJoule has extensive blog postings titled, “The Obstacle Course on the Path to 
Repurposing Used Electric Vehicle Batteries.” While many of those obstacles are 
technological and logistical, co-founder Chung said the company is also 
preparing for a rigorous regulatory process — despite the company being 
considered a crucial, much-needed innovator.

“We haven’t started the permitting process yet but I’ve heard from multiple 
sources that can be a big hurdle,” she said

Like a savvy investor, CalEPA spokeswoman Erin Curtis responded that with 
challenge comes opportunity. She pointed to the report as important groundwork 
for turning the approaching toxic onslaught into an environmental windfall.

“As this is an emerging industry and technology, California has an opportunity 
now to put policies and procedures in place at the outset that will protect 
public health and the environment,” Curtis said.

If things work out right, California would then be a leader not only in getting 
electric cars on the road, but in dealing with the massive toxic waste those 
vehicles will leave behind.

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