Highlights
- UK-led CREEM consortium aims to close the loop on rare earth magnets from electric vehicles with an £11 million project.
- Project involves major companies like Ford, Bentley, and European Metal Recycling.
- Supported by the government’s DRIVE35 initiative.
- Early-stage R&D effort shows promise in rare earth element recycling.
- Requires further development for market viability.
Rare Earth Exchanges® (REEx) looks into the CREEM Consortium and its rare earth recycling promise.
This week’s letsrecycle.com article (opens in a new tab) announces that European Metal Recycling (opens in a new tab) (EMR) has joined the £11 million CirculaREEconomy (CREEM) (opens in a new tab) project—a U.K.-led consortium aiming to close the loop on rare earth magnets from electric vehicles. With big names like Ford, Bentley, Wrightbus, and Less Common Metals involved, it reads like a who’s-who of Britain’s green transition. But does this signal real supply chain readiness—or more well-funded pilot-stage optimism?
What’s Solid Steel, Not Just Scrap?
The CREEM project is indeed backed by the U.K. Department for Business and Trade’s DRIVE35 initiative (opens in a new tab), which is a legitimate £2.5B commitment to zero-emission vehicle manufacturing. EMR’s £730,000 stake in the project—matched by public funds—puts real skin in the game. The involvement of Ionic Technologies, a leading player in rare earth separation and recycling, adds technical credibility.
The plan to build on outcomes from the SCREAM and Re-Rewind initiatives shows institutional memory and signals this is not a “start from scratch” operation. Additionally, the British Geological Survey’s role in material flow and life cycle assessment (LCA) provides vital transparency in verifying environmental claims—something many government-funded projects lack.
Caution: From Lab Bench to Market Benchmarks
Still, investors should temper expectations. EMR and partners are developing long-loop recovery systems—a promising but labor-intensive and costly process. The article correctly notes that rare earth magnets are tough to extract safely and profitably from end-of-life EVs. There’s no mention of commercial-scale throughput, nor clarity on when such technologies will be economically viable without subsidy.
And while the piece today leans heavily into circular economy language (“net zero,” “biodiversity,” “resilience”), there’s minimal data on cost competitiveness, recovery yields, or scalability—the exact metrics investors need.
Final Torque: R&D Muscle with Market Caveats
CREEM isn’t vaporware. It’s a credible, well-funded R&D push aimed at building the UK’s capabilities in REE recycling. But it’s early days. For investors, this is one to watch—not one to chase. Real ROI will depend on whether this consortium moves from demonstration to deployment without losing its magnetic momentum.
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