American Battery reports production milestone, land sale
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Dive Brief:

  • American Battery Technology Co. says it has reached a key milestone in its battery recycling process by moving from the commissioning phase to “24/7” operations and doubling its quarterly production of recycled battery materials.

  • The battery recycling facility in McCarran, Nevada, first opened in 2023 with grant support from the U.S. Department of Energy. The company says it is now processing “recurring shipments of large-scale batteries” from automotive OEMs and is selling “commercial quantities” of intermediate black mass material, as well as other recycled commodities.

  • ABTC also announced it has signed a contract to sell a 12-acre “unused legacy property” in Fernley, Nevada, for about $6.75 million. The sale is meant to bolster future business phases, including a move to produce high-purity battery metals and advance its mining operations.

Dive Insight:

ABTC’s operations progress comes as the large-scale lithium-ion battery recycling industry is facing uncertainty due to factors such as recent tariff news and lack of clarity around the status of federal grant and loan funding for recycling projects.

Under the Biden administration, Inflation Reduction Act and funding from the infrastructure law helped fuel several grant projects under the DOE Loan Programs Office. Funding pauses under the Trump administration have left the status of some of these programs in murky territory. 

DOE in September announced that ABTC received a $144 million grant, which the company plans to use for building a second facility, which would be based in South Carolina. 

During a Feb. 14 earnings call, CEO Ryan Melsert confirmed that American Battery had the grant contract “in hand” and that plans for the facility were in progress. “We're excited to be moving forward with the design of this second recycling facility, supported by the U.S. Department of Energy,” he said during the call.

ABTC did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the status of the loan or project as of April 7.

Redwood Materials, another battery recycler that received a DOE loan for the construction and expansion of a battery materials campus in McCarran, said it made the decision “to discontinue work on the Department of Energy loan and not move forward with closing” based on “careful consideration of our business priorities and evolving market conditions.” The company recently announced it will collaborate with Isuzu to recycle EV batteries.