Finance

Marubeni invests $5 million in UK EV battery recycling firm Altilium

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on January 24, 2025

2 min read

· Last updated: January 27, 2026

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Marubeni's $5 million investment in Altilium for EV battery recycling - Global Banking & Finance Review
This image illustrates Marubeni's strategic $5 million investment in UK-based Altilium, a firm focused on electric vehicle battery recycling, highlighting the growing importance of sustainable practices in finance.
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Marubeni's $5M Investment in UK EV Battery Recycler Altilium

By Nick Carey

LONDON (Reuters) - Japanese trading house Marubeni has invested $5 million in British electric vehicle battery recycler Altilium and will help it to scale up operations, the companies said on Tuesday.

The investment is part of Altilium's Series B fundraising after the corporate venture arm of Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile's (SQM) lithium business provided $9.4 million of Altilium's $12 million Series A round last year.

The increase in sales of electric vehicles has brought with it a race to recycle the valuable minerals in their batteries - primarily lithium, cobalt and nickel - which can be worth thousands of euros per car, and counter China's dominance of this field.

Altilium is one of a number of companies gearing up recycling operations in Europe, where today most EV batteries are shredded into 'black mass' that is shipped to China for processing.

The business currently has a small recycling plant and by 2026 expects to recycle around 24,000 EV battery packs annually.

Altilium aims to expand that to 150,000 battery packs by 2030, which chief operating officer Christian Marston told Reuters would require an investment of over $1 billion.

SQM has been "helping Altilium with the engineering scale up," while Marubeni has already been providing EV batteries for recycling and helping with "the financial scale up," Marston said.

"Marubeni's strength lies in bringing partners that can support building high capex infrastructure in the UK and a domestic supply chain independent of China," Marston said.

(Reporting by Nick Carey; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)

Key Takeaways

  • Marubeni invests $5 million in Altilium.
  • Altilium aims to recycle 150,000 battery packs by 2030.
  • The investment is part of Altilium's Series B fundraising.
  • Altilium seeks to reduce reliance on China's processing.
  • SQM and Marubeni support Altilium's scale-up efforts.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main topic?
The article discusses Marubeni's $5 million investment in UK EV battery recycler Altilium to expand recycling operations.
Another relevant question?
How will Altilium use the investment? Altilium plans to scale up its operations to recycle more EV battery packs.
Third question about the topic?
Why is battery recycling important? It helps recover valuable minerals and reduces reliance on China's processing.

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