Skip to main content

Everledger and Ford launch battery passport pilot

Digital transparency company Everledger has announced the launch of a battery passport pilot with automotive manufacturer Ford Motor Company that is designed to ensure responsible recycling of EV batteries.
By James Foster November 1, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Leanne Kemp, founder and CEO of Everledger

The pilot uses Everledger's technology platform to track EV batteries throughout their lifecycle to ensure responsible management during use and recycling at the end of their useful life. Everledger says this will allow Ford to gain visibility on out-of-warranty batteries, validate responsible end of life recycling, and gain access to data such as recycled critical minerals produced and associated CO2 savings.

Everledger and Ford will use the battery passport solution to track batteries in various late and newer EV models for six months, working together with US lithium-ion battery recyclers Cirba Solutions and Li-Cycle.

To track the battery lifecycle Everledger uses a range of technologies including various types of auto ID, blockchain and artificial intelligence (AI).  During manufacture, Ford batteries and their inner modules are tagged with 2-D data matrix codes, which are then scanned with a cell phone by each organisation as the battery changes hands. These scans allow otherwise separated links in the value chain to report on and access information about a battery's location, chemistry and other attributes and activities taking place, for example transportation, disassembly and recycling.

The Everledger-Ford pilot comes ahead of the new European Battery Regulation that will come into force in late 2022/early 2023 and require manufacturers to report on their extended producer responsibility for proper battery recycling. This pilot, conducted in the North American market, demonstrates how combinations of advanced technologies can streamline regulatory compliance and add efficiencies across the value chain.

"The Everledger Platform will verify a battery's material provenance, chemistry and identity; and measure its sustainability and environmental impact alongside creating a multi-billion-dollar global market for used batteries that maximises the recovery of raw materials and accelerates the development of climate-friendly mobility,” says Leanne Kemp, founder and CEO of Everledger.

After six months of testing, Everledger will release the battery passport commercially, confirming the company has a series of other automotive manufacturers and participants in the battery lifecycle interested in adopting and using the technology.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • November 4, 2022
    Ionic MT says halloysite-derived nano-silicon is a 'game changer'
    Ionic Mineral Technologies, an American advanced battery materials company, has provided an in-depth response to the US Department of Energy’s “Request for Information on the Department of Energy’s Critical Materials Research, Development, Demonstration, and Commercialisation Application Program” (DE-FOA-0002794). 
  • October 21, 2022
    ICASA sets out EV transition offering for fuel retailers
    ICASA has outlined its integrated end-to-end cloud solution for the management of energy activities, including fuel retailers looking to manage the transition to electric vehicles. 
  • July 8, 2024
    EV charging station raw materials market to be worth US$8.1 billion by 2031
    According to a new market research report by Meticulous Research, the EV charging station raw materials market is projected to reach US$8.1 billion by 2031, at a CAGR of 35.6% from 2024–2031.
  • September 22, 2022
    Privacy Policy

    Personal Data processed for the following purposes and using the following services:

    Access to third-party accounts
    Twitter account access

    Personal Data: Data communicated while using the service; device information; email address; first name; last name; Trackers; Usage Data; username

    Advertising
    Primo, Query Click and Better Ads (d3sv.net)
    Personal Data: Trackers; Usage Data