Rare Earth-Free? Or Just Rarely Mentioned Tradeoffs? Ricardo’s ‘Alumotor’ Sparks Hype-and Questions

Aug 2, 2025

3 minute read.

Highlights

  • Ricardo unveils Alumotor, an electric vehicle motor without rare-earth magnets or copper.
  • The motor uses aluminum hairpin windings.
  • The prototype delivers 214kW at 92% peak efficiency.
  • Alumotor potentially reduces dependence on volatile rare earth supply chains.
  • The motor's technology still requires further validation of real-world performance and efficiency claims.

UK engineering firm Ricardo has unveiled (opens in a new tab) its prototype โ€œAlumotorโ€โ€”an electric vehicle (EV) propulsion motor that boasts zero rare-earth magnets and no copper, using aluminum windings instead. The story, featured by AL Circle, casts the Alumotor as a disruptive leap toward greener EVs. But as Rare Earth Exchanges readers know, bold claims demand sober scrutiny.

The Situation

Ricardoโ€™s use of aluminum hairpin windings is a legitimate engineering evolution. Aluminum is cheaper, more abundant, and lighter than copper. At 214kW and 92% peak efficiency, the prototype appears viable for lightweight EVs. Eliminating 12kg of rare earth permanent magnetsโ€”typically neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB)โ€”from the motor could indeed reduce exposure to China-dominated REE supply chains and price volatility.

And yes: OEMs are hunting alternatives. With geopolitical tensions and export controls roiling rare earth markets, magnet-free designs are attractive. Ricardoโ€™s innovation joins a growing list of REE-free approaches, including induction motors, axial flux motors, and even switched reluctance motors, though many face performance or noise hurdles.

But Whatโ€™s Glossed Over?

This article leans heavily on aluminum evangelism but dodges critical caveats. First, aluminum motorsโ€”while cheaperโ€”typically suffer lower conductivity than copper, demanding more material or cooling infrastructure. Thereโ€™s no mention of thermal management tradeoffs or cost impacts for voltage regulation.

Second, efficiency claims lack independent validation. Ricardo doesnโ€™t share test conditions, duty cycles, or thermal thresholds. โ€œOver 92%โ€ is goodโ€”but how does it perform under real-world load variability, where magnet motors excel?

Most glaringly, the article overstates the โ€œenvironmental costโ€ of rare earths, citing โ€œozone depletionโ€โ€”a misleading and unsubstantiated link. The carbon footprint of REE magnets is material-specific and increasingly mitigated by recycling, a growing sector especially outside China. Suggesting that all REE use is unsustainable is scientifically sloppyโ€”and strategically convenient.

U.S. Advantages

Ricardoโ€™s development is admirable, but Western magnet innovationโ€”including NdFeB recycling, Dy/Tb substitution, and magnet-free architectures from firms like Infinitum (opens in a new tab) and Turntide (opens in a new tab)โ€”is already competitive. U.S. companies still lead in venture capital, software-defined motor control, and system-level electrification optimization.

Bottom Line

Ricardoโ€™s Alumotor may well find a nicheโ€”but donโ€™t take it as a knockout blow to rare earth magnets. What this story reflects more than anything is the growing demand for options, not obsolescence. Investors should welcome alternativesโ€”but remain wary of oversimplified narratives that turn engineering nuance into marketing myth.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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