A new factory that provides a more sustainable source of gold and reduces reliance on mining has been unveiled by The Royal Mint.
Located at its site in south Wales, the 3,700 square meter facility uses patented chemistry from Canadian clean tech company Excir, extracting gold from printed circuit boards (PCBs) found in everyday items, such as TVs, laptops and mobile phones, in minutes. Excir’s chemistry works at room temperature, creating a more energy efficient and cost-effective method of gold recovery.
The factory has scaled the technology from laboratory to an industrial level for the first time and has the capacity to process up to 4,000 tonnes of PCBs from e-waste every year. It provides the UK’s oldest company with a new, more sustainable way to “mine” high-quality 999.9 purity gold. Recovered gold is already being used in the luxury jewelry collection, 886 by The Royal Mint.
According to the United Nations’ Global E-waste Monitor, the generation of worldwide e-waste is rising by 2.6 million tonnes every year. A record 62 million tonnes of e-waste was produced in 2022, up 82 percent from 2010.
The new factory offers a more sustainable solution to this growing environmental challenge. It has been designed to ensure that valuable finite resources are recovered, and other materials are appropriately treated for onward processing.
Anne Jessopp, chief executive at The Royal Mint, said: “The Royal Mint is transforming for the future, and the opening of our precious metals recovery factory marks a pivotal step in our journey.
“We are not only preserving finite precious metals for future generations, but we are also preserving the expert craftmanship The Royal Mint is famous for by creating new jobs and reskilling opportunities for our employees.
“We have ambitious plans, and I am proud that we are safeguarding The Royal Mint for another 1,100 years.”
As part of its commitment to being a leader in sustainable precious metals, The Royal Mint has also been actively engaging with major industry bodies to help produce the first standard by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) for the definition of recycled gold, helping to provide clarity to the industry, end consumer and other stakeholders.