Energy transition, Recycling, Artificial Intelligence

CORE

We aim to improve the most challenging branches of the recycling industry; working on e-waste recycling, breaking it down to raw materials

team core

About Us

Team CORE deals with creating a circular solution for complex waste streams such as e-waste, polluted soil, or industrial rest streams; for instance, turning fly ash into basalt, creating solutions to end battery fires.  

Our mission is to stimulate the transition toward a circular economy by developing new technologies. 

team core 2022
CORE 2022

The times we live in are the most innovative, rapidly developing and advanced times humans have ever known. Looking ahead into the future does not give us any reason to doubt that this trend will end anytime soon, which is awesome. However, replacement cycles of consumer electronics are getting shorter and shorter, and with it more and more devices are being thrown away.

In 2016 alone, 44.7 million metric tonnes of e-waste were generated, which is the equivalent of 4500 Eifel towers. This is expected to grow to 52.2 million metric tonnes by the end of 2021. Of this only 20% is supposed to be collected and recycled, the other 80% is not documented and very likely to be dumped, traded or recycled under inferior conditions.

This huge improperly treated waste stream does not only harm the environment but also the health of animals, including humans, that come in contact with it. There are about 60 different chemical elements present in this e-waste stream that spread via water, air, soil, dust and food. Some of these elements, like lead, mercury and cadmium, are very hazardous, especially for children, and can lead to irreversible cognitive deficits and behavioural and motor skill problems. Besides this, not properly recycling e-waste also depletes our earth of very precious and rare materials like gold and platinum. This may not only lead to shortages, but also requires the continuous mining of new raw materials which is very hazardous and damaging to the environment on itself. The United Nations University estimates the raw materials that can be retrieved from e-waste to be worth around €55 billion.

We believe in a world where these problems are non-existent. That’s why we are working on a solution that allows for the industrial application of elementary retraction: a technology that we leverage for recycling materials, such as e-waste, properly.

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