Economy & Markets
3 min read
West Midlands Launches Groundbreaking Rare Earth Magnet Recycling Facility
IOM3
January 19, 2026•3 days ago

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A University of Birmingham facility is now operational for recycling rare earth magnets using hydrogen-based technology. This process efficiently extracts magnets from end-of-life products like electric vehicles and wind turbines without full disassembly. The Tyseley Energy Park facility scales up to commercial production, capable of recovering significant amounts of rare earth alloy annually, supporting a circular economy for these critical materials.
A University of Birmingham, UK, facility for separating and recycling rare earth magnets goes live.
Rare earth magnets can be found in wind turbines, electric vehicles, medical equipment, pumps, robotics, and electronics. The new recycling facility uses hydrogen-based process
Hydrogen Processing of Magnet Scrap (HPMS) technology is an extremely efficient method to extract rare earth magnets from end-of-life products without the need to fully disassemble them. The facility at Tyseley Energy Park in Birmingham scales the process to commercial production levels. It can recover over 400kg of rare earth alloy per batch and into new sintered magnets at 100t capacity per year on a single shift and over 300t on multiple shifts.
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