Global Critical Materials Recovery Market to Reach $50 Billion by 2046
The global critical materials recovery market is expected to experience substantial growth through 2046, driven by accelerating demand for critical materials in clean energy technologies and advanced electronics. The market is primarily driven by lithium-ion battery recycling, followed by rare earth magnet recovery, semiconductor material extraction from e-waste, and platinum group metal recovery from automotive catalysts. The market is segmented by material type, source, and recovery method, with hydrometallurgical processes currently dominating commercial operations. Economic viability varies across material types and regions, with high-value materials like platinum group metals and rare earths offering better recovery economics.
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has announced a significant initiative to bolster the domestic supply chain of critical minerals, allocating nearly $1 billion in funding. This move comes amidst increasing demand for these materials in clean energy technologies and advanced electronics, driven by the growing need for lithium-ion battery recycling, rare earth magnet recovery, semiconductor material extraction from e-waste, and platinum group metal recovery from automotive catalysts [1].The DOE's multi-track funding effort includes up to $500 million from the Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains (MESC) for battery-materials processing, manufacturing, and recycling; $250 million from the Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management for by-product recovery at domestic industrial facilities; and $135 million under MESC for a Rare Earth Elements Demonstration Facility that will test recovery routes from mine tailings and other waste streams [1].
CleanTech Vanadium Mining Corp. (CTVFF) is poised to benefit from this initiative. The company has projects in the Illinois-Kentucky Fluorspar District (IKFD) that span over 8,150 acres, with historical records indicating significant mine wastes and tailings containing fluorspar, germanium, gallium, indium, zinc, lead, and silver [1]. CleanTech is focusing on pursuing DOE funding opportunities with an initial focus on its fluorspar and critical-minerals projects in the IKFD [1].
The U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) 2025 List of Critical Minerals, which expanded to fifty-four commodities, underscores the importance of fluorspar, germanium, gallium, indium, silver, and vanadium [1]. Fluorspar, ranked 47th by the USGS on probability-weighted GDP impact, is categorized as moderate risk and recommended for inclusion in the final list of critical minerals. The DOE's initiative aims to recover fluorspar from legacy mine tailings, aligning with U.S. supply-chain goals [1].
Vanadium, ranked 23rd, is categorized as elevated risk and recommended for inclusion in the final list of critical minerals. The DOE plans to grow U.S. production and processing capacity to meet the need for battery-grade electrolyte feed and ferrovanadium, with CleanTech's Gibellini vanadium project designed to meet this demand [1].
Germanium and gallium, ranked 7th and 6th respectively, are categorized as high risk and recommended for inclusion in the final list of critical minerals. The presence of these materials in the Company's Tabb and Babbs projects' tailings makes them strong candidates for recovery, reducing U.S. dependence on imports [1].
The global critical materials recovery market is expected to experience substantial growth through 2046, driven by accelerating demand for critical materials in clean energy technologies and advanced electronics . Economic viability varies across material types and regions, with high-value materials like platinum group metals and rare earths offering better recovery economics .

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