# Processing chokepoints: the refining and conversion technologies that concentrate supply-chain power in critical minerals
> Seven technologies, from high-pressure acid leaching to battery recycling, determine whether refined critical minerals reach EV batteries and magnets from diversified or concentrated sources.

**Meta:** type: reference · date: 2026-07-03 · heads:  · 4 takes · 2 lenses · 2 regions

## What it is

Mining ore is only the first step. The battery, motor, and magnet industries run on refined metal, separated oxides, and fabricated alloys. This beat tracks seven midstream processing technologies that convert ore, brine, and spent batteries into usable industrial inputs: hydrometallurgical refining and chemical separation of concentrates (refining-separation); high-pressure acid leaching of laterite nickel ore (HPAL); direct lithium extraction from brines and clays (DLE); rare earth permanent magnet fabrication (magnet-manufacturing); pyrometallurgical smelting of copper and nickel from sulfide deposits (smelting); lithium-ion battery recycling (battery-recycling); and adoption of alternative chemistries that reduce primary demand (substitution). A world-news reader tracks this beat because processing is where supply-chain concentration peaks: as of 2024, the top three refining nations held approximately 86% of the global critical minerals refining market.

## History

Pyrometallurgical smelting of sulfide ores dominated copper and nickel production through the 20th century. HPAL was commercialised in Cuba (Moa Bay) in 1959 but remained niche until the 1990s, when Queensland Nickel and Murrin Murrin in Western Australia demonstrated it could unlock laterite nickel deposits that sulfide-route smelters cannot process economically. China entered rare earth hydrometallurgy at scale in the 1980s and 1990s, leveraging cheap reagents and relaxed environmental standards to displace separation plants in France, Australia, and the US; by 2010, China held roughly 91% of global rare earth refining capacity. Conventional lithium brine production relied on solar evaporation ponds requiring 12-24 months per batch, a bottleneck that motivated DLE research. Battery recycling emerged commercially in the 2010s, driven initially by cobalt-rich cathodes in consumer electronics.

## Current state

Processing concentration deepened after 2015. China built HPAL capacity in Indonesia's Sulawesi and North Maluku provinces, with Huayou Cobalt, Tsingshan, and Lygend among the lead operators ([华友钴业签署现代汽车谅解备忘录，加入印尼20GWh电池合资项目，并与tozero合作开展欧洲回收](/zh/n/huayou-indonesia-ev-chain-2026)); Indonesia's 2026 ore quota tightening is now testing that model ([印度尼西亚2026年镍矿开采配额触及上限，冶炼厂原料告急](/zh/n/indonesia-nickel-rkab-ceiling-2026)). In DLE, Energyx advanced Project Lonestar in Texas toward US commercial demonstration ([EnergyX在德州投产美国首座直接锂提取工厂；力拓与埃赫曼在阿根廷运营商业化DLE](/zh/n/energyx-project-lonestar-dle-2026)), and Rio Tinto's Rincon project in Argentina exported its first lithium carbonate in early 2026 ([力拓从阿根廷Rincon项目首次出口电池级锂，并完成11.75亿美元多边融资](/zh/n/rio-tinto-rincon-first-export-2026)). Battery recycling reached commercial scale in South Korea, China, and Europe: recovery rates for nickel and cobalt exceeded 40% of theoretically available feedstock in 2023, while lithium reached approximately 20%. In rare earth processing, Iluka Resources is building Australia's first heavy rare earth separation plant at Eneabba in Western Australia ([伊卢卡的埃尼阿巴精炼厂建设进度达50%，并锁定车企对1,200吨/年的约束性承购；能源燃料公司目标在2026年第四季度于犹他州实现重稀土分离](/zh/n/iluka-eneabba-refinery-2026)).

## Relationships

The seven subjects form a cascade. Smelting handles copper and primary nickel from sulfide ores; HPAL processes the laterite ores smelters cannot touch, dissolving nickel and cobalt at 250°C under high pressure in sulfuric acid with recovery above 90%, and the mixed hydroxide precipitate (MHP) output feeds China's battery-grade cathode precursor plants. Refining and separation spans both routes, plus rare earth solvent extraction: separated neodymium and dysprosium oxides flow into magnet-manufacturing, where they are reduced to metal, alloyed, milled, and sintered into NdFeB permanent magnets for EV motors and wind turbines. Battery recycling intersects all streams, recovering lithium, cobalt, nickel, and manganese from spent EV packs through black-mass hydrometallurgy ([Glencore收购Li-Cycle，Ascend Elements申请破产，欧洲回收企业募资逾5亿欧元，商业规模电池回收在2026年加速整合](/zh/n/battery-recycling-commercial-scale-2026)) and reducing primary refining pressure. Substitution cuts demand at the source: lithium iron phosphate cathodes eliminate cobalt; sodium-ion cells eliminate lithium; switched-reluctance motors reduce rare earth magnet requirements.

## What to watch

Three near-term questions set the pace. First, whether Indonesia's 2026 RKAB quota tightening forces Chinese-linked HPAL operators to seek ore from the Philippines or New Caledonia. Second, whether any DLE project outside Argentina achieves nameplate commercial output before 2028, validating the technology's cost curve against conventional evaporation ponds. Third, whether Iluka's Eneabba refinery commissions on schedule, which would create the first non-Chinese facility capable of separating heavy rare earth oxides including dysprosium at commercial scale. In recycling, the EU Battery Regulation's recycled-content requirements, applying to batteries placed on the EU market from 2028, are the forcing function for Western hydrometallurgical investment. In substitution, CATL and BYD's sodium-ion ramp in China will set the global pace and could compress lithium carbonate demand forecasts before mid-decade.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### official record
- **International Energy Agency** (Global, en) — IEA Global Critical Minerals Outlook 2025; documents the top three refining nations holding approximately 86% of global critical minerals refining market share in 2024 and assesses diversification challenges across midstream processing and separation.
  Source: https://www.iea.org/reports/global-critical-minerals-outlook-2025
- **International Energy Agency** (Global, en) — IEA Recycling of Critical Minerals; finds recovery rates for nickel and cobalt exceeded 40% of theoretically available feedstock in 2023, lithium reached approximately 20%, and recycling could reduce new cobalt mine development needs by 35% by 2050.
  Source: https://www.iea.org/reports/recycling-of-critical-minerals
- **US Geological Survey** (United States, en) — USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries 2026; covers production, processing and trade data for over 90 mineral commodities including nickel, lithium, cobalt and rare earths, with the US critical minerals list expanded to 60 commodities.
  Source: https://pubs.usgs.gov/publication/mcs2026

### industry explainer
- **Nickel Institute** (Global, en) — Nickel Institute 2025 explainer on HPAL processing of laterite nickel ores; describes autoclave conditions at approximately 250°C, acid consumption, nickel-cobalt leaching rates above 95%, and the technology's role in expanding battery-grade nickel supply from Indonesia.
  Source: https://nickelinstitute.org/en/blog/2025/march/nickel-industry-part-3-processing-nickel-laterites-high-pressure-acid-leaching

## Across the graph
- Related: [[indonesia-nickel-rkab-ceiling-2026]], [[iluka-eneabba-refinery-2026]], [[battery-recycling-commercial-scale-2026]], [[energyx-project-lonestar-dle-2026]], [[rio-tinto-rincon-first-export-2026]], [[huayou-indonesia-ev-chain-2026]]
- Entities: Refining Separation, Hpal, Direct Lithium Extraction, Magnet Manufacturing, Smelting, Battery Recycling, Substitution

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