On February 21, the State Council Executive Meeting approved the Action Plan for Improving the Power Battery Recycling System for New Energy Vehicles. The plan calls for strengthening end-to-end management, addressing key obstacles, and establishing a standardized, safe, and efficient recycling system. It also emphasizes the use of digital technologies to enhance full lifecycle monitoring of power batteries, enabling traceability from production and sales to dismantling and reuse. Furthermore, the plan underscores the importance of regulating recycling practices through legal means, formulating and improving relevant administrative regulations, and reinforcing oversight and supervision mechanisms.
As a long-time white-listed enterprise under the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Battery Science & Technology has been actively advancing the standardized development of China’s power battery recycling industry and has participated in the drafting of eight national standards. Additionally, it has leveraged two core proprietary technologies—“discharge-free dismantling of used power batteries” and “full-component regeneration of LFP battery powder”—to successfully resolve key industry challenges such as electrolyte condensation, battery dust blockage, and low material recovery rates during the dismantling process.
At present, Battery Science & Technology has achieved carbon neutrality and developed a safe, environment-friendly, and pollution-free dismantling process. Its operations generate no wastewater or solid waste, and exhaust gases are treated in a centralized, safe, and eco-friendly manner. Its technological processes have been recognized and included in both the National Catalogue of Advanced and Applicable Processes, Technologies and Equipment for Comprehensive Utilization of Industrial Resources and the National Directory of Advanced Pollution Prevention and Control Technologies, highlighting its strong technical barriers and regulatory compliance advantages.
Recently, Economic Daily featured a report on Battery Science & Technology.
In the interview, President Qiang FU emphasized that resolving the challenges in power battery recycling requires coordinated efforts from multiple stakeholders. He called for a comprehensive approach involving policy guidance, technological innovation, the development of a well-structured recycling system, as well as strengthened corporate responsibility and public education to gradually foster the healthy growth of China’s power battery recycling industry.