As part of the Green Deal, several initiatives are taking place in the European Union, like the Batteries Regulation which came into force in August 2023 and is applicable since February 2024. This regulation set rules for the entire lifecycle of batteries: design, production, use, recycling and disposal. In addition to due diligence obligations, recycling and recovery targets are defined for Cobalt. By 2025, recyclers must recover at least 90% of cobalt from waste batteries. By 2031, 16% (average weight of Cobalt metal in a battery) of Cobalt in a new battery must be recycled content and 26% by 2036. Battery manufacturers must disclose the amount and source of cobalt in their material declaration.
In November 2023, the European Commission requested ECHA (European Chemicals Agency) to prepare a study report on substances of concern in batteries. The timeframe to deliver the final report is expected by end of 2026. To support this initiative, Eurometaux, the European non-ferrous metals association, created a working group “ECaBaM”, the Exchange and Capacity-building Group on Battery Materials. Those workshops enable collaboration between regulatory bodies and industry stakeholder. The definition of substances of concern is part of the deliverables of this project.
Cobalt Institute actively participates to those workshops to support Cobalt in this application.