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cylib confirms EUR 26,1 million grant for battery recycling facility

cylib battery recycling facility

cylib confirms EUR 26,1 million grant for battery recycling facility

Scale-up to build sustainable lithium-ion battery recycling facility at CHEMPARK Dormagen for European resilience

Aachen/Dormagen, 24 September 2025 – Battery recycling company cylib has secured EUR 26.1 million in European Union funding from the ERDF/JTF programme in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) to build one of the largest lithium-ion battery recycling facilities in Europe at CHEMPARK Dormagen.

Dr Lilian Schwich, co-founder and co-CEO, says:

We are deeply grateful to the state of North Rhine-Westphalia and the European Union for funding this project and supporting our mission to produce advanced materials for sustainable batteries and resilient European value chains,

“This validates our superior technology and advanced engineering capabilities, whilst recognizing our team’s achievements to date.”

The grant, confirmed through the “Produktives.NRW” programme, follows an initial commitment announced in November 2024 and will specifically finance the construction of the first stage of the industrial facility. The facility will process black mass (an intermediate product of shredded battery materials) to recover critical raw materials including lithium, graphite, cobalt, nickel and manganese from lithium-ion batteries, strengthening Europe’s geopolitical independence in these strategic materials.

Technology delivers superior recovery rates

The OLiC (Optimised Lithium & Graphite Recovery) process recovers over 90% of critical materials from spent batteries, while producing 80% lower carbon emissions than primary extraction. This proprietary water-based technology will now be scaled from cylib’s Aachen pilot line to full industrial implementation.

At full build-out stage, the facility, scheduled to begin operations in 2027, will process up to 140,000 electric vehicle batteries annually (equivalent to 60,000 tonnes of end-of-life batteries or 20,000 tonnes of black mass). As electrification accelerates – with every fourth new car sold globally now being electric – Europe faces unprecedented demand for battery materials. This facility demonstrates how next-generation recycling technology can reduce dependence on primary mining while strengthening geopolitical independence.

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