Boliden expands electronic scrap recycling capacity

Archiv – Sweden | Precious metals refiner Boliden is investing SEK 1.3 billion (US$ 169) and trebling its electronic scrap recycling capacity. The investment increases the capacity to 120,000 tonnes per year and thereby strengthens Boliden’s position as one of the world’s leading recyclers of electronic scrap. Sweden | Precious metals refiner Boliden is investing SEK 1.3 billion (US$ 169) and trebling its electronic scrap recycling capacity. The investment increases the capacity to 120,000 tonnes per year and thereby strengthens Boliden’s position as one of the world’s leading recyclers of electronic scrap.
The investment, in which a Kaldo furnace at the Rönnskär copper smelter is the biggest component, will increase the facility’s electronic scrap recycling capacity from the current level of 45,000 tonnes per year to 120,000 tonnes. The expansion will be implemented in 2010 and 2011 and is expected to come on line at the end of 2011/beginning of 2012. Reflecting major synergies with the existing copper production process a pay-back of less than four years will be achieved.
The combination of the increased use of electronic products, shorter product lifecycles and stricter legislation governing the collection and processing of electronic waste means that the global availability of electronic scrap is increasing, and that the availability of electronic scrap now exceeds the capacity for recycling it.
“A growing part of the raw materials used in metal production in future will come from scrap products. The expansion takes advantage of our extensive experience of processing electronic scrap and will enhance Rönnskär’s commercial potential in a growing market,” says Roger Sundqvist, General Manager at Rönnskär.
The Rönnskär smelter has, for many years now, been a technological leader in the field of recycling metals from electronic scrap, and it is now one of the world’s biggest players in the field. The margins in electronic scrap recycling are higher and the profitability’s volatility lower than in traditional copper production.

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