Reigning F1 champion Max Verstappen closed to within 12 points of leader Lando Norris heading into final round in UAE next weekend.
Published On 30 Nov 202530 Nov 2025
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Four-time Formula One (F1) world champion Max Verstappen of Red Bull Racing kept the three-way 2025 drivers’ championship battle alive with Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri after securing victory in the penultimate race of the season at the Qatar Grand Prix on Sunday.
Verstappen closed to within 12 points of McLaren’s Norris, who finished fourth at Lusail Circuit, heading into the 24th and final round in Abu Dhabi next weekend.
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Norris’s teammate Piastri finished second in the race after starting on pole position and is now 16 points behind in the championship battle. But the Australian is still in with a chance to win the drivers’ title.
Carlos Sainz of Williams finished third in Qatar to round out the podium behind Verstappen and Piastri.
The victory was Verstappen’s 70th grand prix career victory.
The top three drivers now each have seven wins for the 2025 season.
Max Verstappen leads the race during the Qatar Grand Prix at Lusail Circuit, Qatar on November 30, 2025 [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]
McLaren get it wrong on early safety car call
Piastri won the holeshot to the first corner with Norris alongside him on the front row, only to be overtaken by Verstappen, who began the race from third spot on the grid.
During lap seven, Red Bull pitted Verstappen under a safety car, resulting in a free pit stop, unlike McLaren, which kept its two drivers out on the track, resulting in Norris and Piastri losing valuable time later when they made their final stop.
This played into Verstappen’s hands, with the Dutchman able to control the race for the remainder of the 57-lap contest, crossing the finish line ahead of Piastri by just under eight seconds.
“Clearly, we did not get it right tonight,” conceded Piastri.
“I drove as fast as I could, but it wasn’t to be. In hindsight, it is pretty obvious what we should have done, but we’ll discuss that as a team. [It’s] a little bit tough to swallow at the moment,” the Australian added.
Verstappen said: “An incredible race for us. We made the right call to box under that safety car. A strong race for us on a weekend that was tough.”
The McLarens now head to Abu Dhabi with a hard-charging Verstappen looking to repeat history by clinching a championship in the last race at Yas Marina, having done so when he overtook Lewis Hamilton on the final lap after a controversial finish in 2021.
“It’s possible now, but we will see,” said Verstappen, who had written off his chances earlier this season. “I don’t really worry about it too much.”
Max Verstappen crosses the finish line to win the Formula One Qatar Grand Prix at the Lusail International Circuit [Karim Jaafar/AFP]
MBW Views is a series of op-eds from eminent music industry people… with something to say. The following MBW op/ed comes from Deviate Digital founder Sammy Andrews.
Not a day goes by without me having several conversations about AI in music.
I recently travelled to the (most excellent) Bogotá Music Market in Colombia and was fascinated to hear in person the global conversations, whilst being acutely aware of the, at times, hyperlocal potential legislation.
You can be sure that no matter where you are in the world, managers, labels, DSPs, publishers, artists, songwriters, marketers, finance teams and societies all have views, but increasingly they are rarely aligned in an impactful way.
Some see AI as a genuinely useful creative and operational tool. Others see it as a siphon on royalties and rights. Both perspectives have merit.
The challenge for the industry worldwide right now is to move beyond competing opinions and start building systems that actually work, whilst not stifling governments’ tech potential for their nations.
The first step is to abandon the false black-and-white narrative and look more carefully and considerately at how AI is actually used. When it assists in a human-led production, generating stems, cleaning up a vocal, or handling mastering, authorship remains human.
The questions then become about inputs and disclosure: Were likeness rights cleared? Was the training data lawfully sourced? Was the AI’s role declared?
Some platforms have already made this mandatory. YouTube requires creators to flag realistic synthetic content. TikTok has started embedding content credentials that travel with audio. Meta labels synthetic media across its services. Disclosure is no longer a matter of branding; it has become compliance.
Fully AI-native output is a different matter. In the US, works without human authorship are not copyrightable, which removes statutory royalties and exclusivity. Rights can only be claimed through contracts, trademarks, or platform terms.
China has recognised some AI outputs where human input is deemed creative, while simultaneously imposing binding labelling rules on developers and distributors.
The UK still clings to an outdated “computer-generated works” clause that does little to address today’s realities.
Japan and Singapore permit broad text-and-data-mining exceptions for training, but they remain unclear on how outputs are treated.
The result is a patchwork of legal regimes in which the same track may be protected in one country and fall into the public domain in another.
DSPs are responding, but painfully slowly. One of the largest has removed tens of millions of tracks over the past year for suspected fraud or manipulation. It is now preparing stricter rules on impersonation, spam filters to choke off mass duplicate uploads, and AI disclosures carried through DDEX metadata.
These steps recognise the scale of the problem, but their effectiveness will depend entirely on execution. Filters must block manipulation without penalising legitimate artists, and disclosures must travel consistently across the chain. Without that, the appearance of progress risks becoming little more than window dressing.
The more complicated and unresolved issue is what counts as “human enough.” A rapper over AI-generated beats, a band using AI for mixing, a vocal polished with generative tools; each involves different levels of machine input.
Right now, there is no universally or even nationally accepted threshold. Leaving platforms to define this independently risks a fragmented environment where rules shift from service to service. What the industry needs is a shared framework, developed with rights-holders, creators, and regulators, that can be applied consistently across societies, DSPs, and licensing.
Verification is another weak link. PRS has introduced “know your customer” checks, but most distributors have not. Without consistent onboarding standards, fraudulent actors can migrate freely between services.
Preferred-partner schemes and verification marks look credible but mean little without genuine due diligence and consequences for those that enable spam.
This weakness helps explain why Deezer now reports over 30,000 fully AI-generated tracks every single day, almost a third of all new uploads, with up to 70% of streams of those flagged tracks identified as fraudulent.
Those uploads don’t just clutter platforms, they distort royalty pools. Other services have remained quiet, and that lack of transparency is itself a problem. If streams are being siphoned, rights-holders need to know the scale in order to conduct business accordingly.
The impact is not confined to Europe or North America. In Latin America, musicians are protesting against what they describe as an AI flood, complaining that their catalogues are being buried under synthetic tracks on Spotify, Deezer, and YouTube Music.
“AI is global, but the systems for governing it are fragmented.”
Beyond royalties, they are facing impersonation and the erosion of visibility. The lesson is obvious: AI is global, but the systems for governing it are fragmented, and artists in developing markets often face the sharpest edge of the disruption.
Metadata offers some partial answers. ISRC remains process-neutral and should not, in my opinion, be split into “human” and “AI” codes, but it does not capture provenance. DDEX has attempted to address this with ERN v4.3.1, which introduces optional flags to show when a recording or contribution was made fully or partly with generative AI.
This integrates disclosure into the same supply chain that already governs release data, rights and pricing. On the content side, C2PA credentials allow provenance to be embedded in audio files, while ISCC creates fingerprints that help detect duplicates and manage fraud.
These are useful tools, but they are incomplete. The DDEX fields are optional, they don’t require disclosure of the specific model or vendor, and they leave the term “partially” undefined.
Some momentum is building. Universal Music Group and Beggars Group have committed to using these standards, and distributors are starting to follow. In May this year, SonoSuite upgraded its Spotify feeds to ERN 4.3 as part of its Preferred Provider status. In June, Revelator did the same.
Implementation is beginning but, until adoption is universal, the benefits will remain limited. Metadata has always been the industry’s weak spot; in the age of AI the cost of half-measures is far higher.
Policy responses diverge. The EU’s AI Act is now in force, with transparency obligations to be fleshed out through delegated acts later this year.
The US Copyright Office has held firm on human authorship, while lawsuits against AI developers pile up, creating settlements that provide partial guardrails but little true clarity.
The UK has floated a training exception with a rights-holder opt-out, but without mandatory dataset transparency the opt-out is effectively unenforceable.
Resistance is building. In September, the Musicians’ Union passed a motion at the Trades Union Congress demanding an AI bill with stronger copyright protections and fair remuneration for creators.
China has already imposed binding rules requiring both visible and embedded labelling of synthetic content. WIPO, despite years of consultation, has failed to deliver enforceable standards.
Meanwhile, courts across the US and Europe are still wrestling with the fundamental question: is training on copyrighted works without consent an infringement, or not?
Licensing training data remains the structural gap. One-to-one deals cannot scale. Collective licensing is the only workable model, yet most societies have hesitated and left publishers to litigate and labels to strike bilateral agreements.
Sweden’s STIM has broken ground with a collective AI licence for creators who opt in, requiring attribution technology such as Sureel to track how works influence outputs and making revenue flows auditable in real time. It may become a blueprint for others.
At the same time, the arrival of enterprise-focused models like Stability AI’s Stable Audio 2.5 shows that robust licensing frameworks are not a theoretical need, but a commercial necessity.
It is worth remembering that AI is not only a disruptor, it is also being used to fix the industry’s existing weaknesses. BMG, working with Google Cloud, has launched StreamSight, a tool designed to accelerate royalty forecasting and make payment processes more transparent.
This illustrates the double edge of AI: the same technology that threatens to swamp the system is also being deployed to modernise it.
“Before anyone rushes to legislate or rewrite contracts, the industry should ask whether it is ready to throw stones from glass houses.”
AI is now part of music creation. Sometimes it is a studio tool, sometimes a collaborator, sometimes the principal composer. The task is not to reject it but to integrate it into systems that protect attribution and value. That requires clear disclosure, stronger verification, effective fraud control and scalable licensing.
The real risk is not that AI overwhelms the industry. The real risk is that the systems underpinning recorded music remain fragmented. Standards exist but are inconsistently applied. Laws are advancing but not aligned. Platforms are taking action but are still reluctant to publish the data that would prove effectiveness.
And before anyone rushes to legislate, label, or rewrite contracts, the industry should ask whether it is ready to throw stones from glass houses. Catalogues are already riddled with inconsistent metadata, missing credits, and in some cases tracks that carry AI fingerprints no one has admitted to – and in places I suspect legislation would disproportionately impact some genres, such as electronic.
Companies like Uhmbrella are now offering the ability to audit entire catalogues, scanning recordings for AI involvement, metadata gaps, or unlabelled generative content. If labels, publishers and distributors do not first clean their own shelves, they risk building new rules on shaky ground.
Trying to impose order while ignoring what is already in the system is an invitation to misallocated royalties, hidden liabilities and unnecessary fights with artists.
Unless those gaps are confronted head-on, confidence in streaming will weaken further, and AI will continue to expose just how fragile the foundations of this industry already were.
Hondurans are casting their ballots in a general election that is being dominated by threats from US President Donald Trump.
There are five presidential candidates on the bill, but the poll is essentially being seen as a three-way race between former defence minister Rixi Moncada of the leftist Libre party, TV host Salvador Nasralla from the centrist Liberals, and businessman Nasry “Tito” Asfura, of the right-wing National Party.
Trump has thrown his support behind Asfura and threatened to cut financial aid to the Central American nation if he does not win.
The most recent opinion poll puts Nasralla in the lead, but with 34% of voter saying they are still undecided, it could be anyone’s race.
Outgoing president Xiomara Castro, who was the country’s first female president when she took office in 2021 for the Libre party, is not allowed to run for a second term under Honduran law.
She has backed Moncada to take her place. The 60-year-old lawyer has pledged to protect “natural wealth” from “21st-century filibusters who want to privatise everything” if she wins. Moncada has also expressed her commitment to combating corruption “in all its forms”.
On Saturday, Moncada accused Trump of meddling in the election, calling his endorsement of her right-wing opponent “totally interventionist”.
Trump had said that the US would be “very supportive” if Tito Asfura wins the presidency.
“If he doesn’t win, the United States will not be throwing good money after bad, because a wrong Leader can only bring catastrophic results to a country, no matter which country it is,” Trump wrote on his social media platform, Truth Social.
The US sent more than $193m (£146m) to Honduras last fiscal year, according to the State Department website, and despite aid cuts, has sent more than $102m this year. The Trump Administration has already reportedly cut $167m in economic and governance aid that had been earmarked for 2024 and 2025, the Congress website says.
In another post, Trump wrote that he and Asfura, who is the former mayor of the capital, Tegucigalpa, could “work together to fight the Narcocommunists” and counter drug trafficking.
Nasry Asfura has pledged in a series of social media posts to bring “development and opportunities for everyone”, to “facilitate foreign and domestic investment into the country” and “generate employment for all.”
Asfura has carefully tried to distance himself from Hernández. On Friday he told news agency AFP that he has “no ties” with the ex-president, and that “the party is not responsible for his personal actions.”
The current front runner, though, is 72-year-old Salvador Nasralla, who is running for president for the fourth time.
He claims that his win in 2017 was stolen due to “electoral fraud perpetrated by Hernández”. This was never proven and a partial recount found no irregularities, though the decision did spark mass protests across the country.
According to his campaign website, Nasralla says his government’s main focus would be “an open economy”, and that he is committed to generating employment. He also says that if he wins, he will sever ties with China and Venezuela.
Tensions between Venezuela and the US have escalated recently – the US has built up its military presence in the area and carried out at least 21 deadly strikes on boats it says were carrying drugs. On Saturday, Trump declared that Venezuela’s airspace should be considered closed, even though he does not have the power to do that.
Polls for the single-round elections opened at 07:00 CST (13:00 GMT) and will close after 10 hours of voting.
Pre-emptive accusations of election fraud, made both by the ruling party and opposition, have sown mistrust in the vote and sparked fears of post-election unrest.
It prompted the president of the National Electoral Council, Ana Paola Hall, to warn all parties “not to fan the flames of confrontation or violence”.
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The vote is taking place in a highly polarised climate, with the US backing the right-wing candidate Nasry Asfura.
Published On 30 Nov 202530 Nov 2025
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Hondurans are heading to the polls to elect a new president in a tightly contested race that is taking place amid concerns over voter fraud in the impoverished Central American country.
Polls opened on Sunday at 7am local time (13:00 GMT) for 10 hours of voting, with the first results expected late Sunday night.
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Most polls show a virtual tie between three of the five contenders: former Defence Minister Rixi Moncada of the governing leftist Liberty and Refoundation (LIBRE) party; former Tegucigalpa Mayor Nasry Asfura of the right-wing National Party; and television host Salvador Nasralla of the centrist Liberal Party.
The elections, in which the 128 members of Congress, hundreds of mayors, and thousands of other public officials will also be chosen, are taking place in a highly polarised climate, with the three top candidates accusing each other of plotting fraud. Moncada has suggested that she will not recognise the official results.
Incumbent President Xiomara Castro of the LIBRE party is limited by law to one term in office.
Honduras’s Attorney General’s Office, aligned with the ruling party, has accused the opposition parties of planning to commit voter fraud, a claim they deny.
Prosecutors have opened an investigation into audio recordings that allegedly show a high-ranking National Party politician discussing plans with an unidentified military officer to influence the election.
The alleged recordings, which the National Party says were created using artificial intelligence, have become central to Moncada’s campaign.
Public distrust
Political tensions have contributed to a growing public distrust of the electoral authorities and the electoral process in general. There have also been delays in the provision of voting materials.
“We are hoping that there will be no fraud and that the elections will be peaceful,” said Jennifer Lopez, a 22-year-old law student in Tegucigalpa. “This would be a huge step forward for democracy in our country.”
Amid the heated atmosphere, 6.5 million Hondurans will decide between continuing with Castro’s left-wing social and economic agenda or shifting towards a conservative agenda by supporting the Liberal or National parties.
Castro, the first woman to govern Honduras, has increased public investment and social spending. The economy has grown moderately, and poverty and inequality have decreased, although both remain high. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has praised her government’s prudent fiscal management.
The country’s homicide rate has also fallen to its lowest level in recent history, but violence persists.
US stance
The Organization of American States has expressed concerns about the electoral process, and the majority of its members in an extraordinary session this week called for the government to conduct elections free of intimidation, fraud and political interference.
US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau also warned on X that the United States will respond “swiftly and decisively to anyone who undermines the integrity of the democratic process in Honduras”.
US President Donald Trump has backed Asfura, posting on social media that “if he doesn’t win, the United States will not be throwing good money after bad”.
Honduras, where six out of every 10 citizens live in poverty, experienced a coup in 2009 when an alliance of right-wing military figures, politicians and businessmen overthrew Manuel Zelaya, the husband of the current president.
In 2021, Honduran voters gave Castro a landslide victory, ending decades of rule by the National and Liberal parties.
At least four people have been killed in a mass shooting at afamily gatheringin California, authorities say.
Ten others were injured in the shooting on Saturday evening at a restaurant in the state’s northern city of Stockton.
Local police say the victims include both adults and children. The conditions of the injured have not been confirmed.
A suspect is still on the loose and police say they believe the shooting may have been “targeted”.
The city’s deputy mayor earlier said the shooting had occurred “at a children’s birthday party”. Police have not confirmed the type of event at which the shooting occurred, beyond it being a family gathering.
“[A] birthday party should never be a place where families fear for their lives,” Deputy Mayor Jason Lee wrote on social media.
The San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office said the shooting happened shortly before 18:00 local time (02:00 GMT on Sunday), and is appealing to anyone with “information, video footage, or who may have witnessed any part of the incident” to come forward.
Spokeswoman Heather Brent described the incident as “unfathomable”, adding: “This is a very active and ongoing investigation, and information remains limited.
“Early indications suggest this may be a targeted incident, and investigators are exploring all possibilities.”
Stockton’s Mayor Christina Fugazi called the shooting “unacceptable”.
“Families should be together instead of at the hospital, standing next to their loved one, praying that they survive.”
California has some of the strictest firearm laws in the US, and has in recent years faced challenges to it.
The following year, the US Supreme Court expanded gun rights as it struck down a New York law restricting gun-carrying rights, jeopardising similar regulation in California.
”Families should be together instead of at the hospital”, says Stockton’s mayor
Your boss’s mood and behavior can affect how everyone else around them performs at work. But the happier your boss is, the happier their employees are—and that tends to have a positive impact on both the company’s bottom line, and its market performance.
That’s the conclusion from Arthur C. Brooks, a Harvard professor who teaches courses on leadership and happiness at both the Harvard Kennedy School and Harvard Business School. Speaking recently at Harvard Business School’s Klarman Hall for an episode of the HBR IdeaCast, Brooks said “happier employees are more profitable, more productive employees. That’s just the way it is. If you can have a happier workforce, you’re going to have a better company. And the results are going to be there.”
Brooks, a bestselling author whose recent book Build the Life You Want was co-written with Oprah Winfrey, said leaders who know how to prioritize their happiness will learn it “really, really is a good investment.”
“What they find is, for example, if you’re in the top 20% of workplace well-being, you will be, on average, about 520 basis points above the S&P 500 in your stock price over the past year,” Brooks said. “This stuff is really performing. It really, really is a good investment.”
The problem, Brooks argued, is that companies often misunderstand what makes employees happy. When Silicon Valley firms ask workers what would improve their satisfaction, “the employees don’t know. They just know they’re not happy. And so they’ll say stuff like, I don’t know, a ping pong table. How about avocado toast?”
Brooks attributed this gap between what companies offer and what employees need to a deeper issue: leadership disconnection. When a boss is stressed, isolated, or unhappy—conditions he noted are nearly universal for new CEOs—they struggle to create the psychological safety and attentiveness that employees crave.
“The number one predictor of somebody hating their job is a bad boss,” Brooks said. “And it has a lot to do with the character, personality, and leadership style of the boss. If you’re the boss, you can ruin the workplace very, very quickly.”
This influence operates through what psychologists call emotional contagion, meaning an employee’s satisfaction and engagement are directly shaped by their manager’s emotional state and presence. A leader working on their own well-being is better equipped to listen, empower their team, and create the conditions where genuine workplace relationships flourish.
According to Brooks, employees want four specific things: genuine friendships at work, feeling empowered and improving at their jobs, management that listens to their suggestions, and efficiency (not having their time wasted in unnecessary meetings).
The leadership trap
It’s natural to want to climb the corporate ladder—to seek challenge, and all the various perks that come with greater responsibility. But Brooks said the top two emotions CEOs experience during their first 24 months on the job aren’t joy or contentment. Instead, they’re loneliness and anger.
“A lot of them are really caught by surprise because once again, your ancient limbic system says, climb, man, the brass ring,” Brooks said. “That’s where it’s at. It’s going to be so great. And they get there, and they don’t like it.”
For Brooks, his main goal is training managers with a specific goal: “to be happy people.”
“That’s the number one predictor of being a good boss is working on your own happiness,” he said.
He drew a parallel to parenting, dismissing the common advice that parents are “never happier than your unhappiest child” as fundamentally misguided. “That’s just bad parenting, straight up, because nobody wants to have an unhappy mother or father. And nobody wants to have an unhappy boss.”
“If you’re in any position of leadership, you have an ethical responsibility to be working on your happiness because it’s your gift to the people over whom you’re a steward,” he said.
You can watch the full talk with Brooks and Harvard Business Review’s Adi Ignatius below.
For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.
The 2025 Japan Open concluded tonight from the Tokyo Aquatics Center but not before Olympic silver medalist Tomoyuki Matsushita ripped a new lifetime best in the men’s 200m IM.
After claiming the 4th seed with a solid morning effort of 1:58.78, 20-year-old Matsushita crushed a monster performance of 1:55.60 to take the gold.
16-year-old World Junior record holder in the 400m IM Yumeki Kojima reaped silver with a time of 1:57.51 and So Ogata rounded out the podium this evening in 1:57.64.
As for Matsushita, his swim hacked well over half a second off his previous best-ever performance of 1:56.35. That slower outing was performed at the Japanese World Championship Trials this past March to check him in as Japan’s 4th-swiftest performer in history.
Tonight, however, splitting 24.64/29.03/34.04/27.89, Matsuhita bumps himself up to now rank 3rd among all-time Japanese men and takes over the #1 spot in the season’s world rankings, dethroning teammate Kosuke Makino.
He is also now the 15th-best performer in history worldwide.
Top 5 Japanese Men’s LCM 200 IM Performers All-Time
Matsushita’s 1:55.60 performance would have garnered him the bronze at the 2024 Olympic Games and 4th place at this year’s World Championships.
It’s important to note that Kojima’s silver medal-worthy 1:57.51 effort represents a near-lifetime best, falling just shy of the 1:57.32 nabbed at this year’s World Junior Championships. That stands as the fastest mark ever recorded by a 16-year-old.
Matsushita’s 200m IM result comes on the heels of last night’s 4:07.67 stunner at the hands of 19-year-old Asaki Nishikawa in the men’s 400m IM. Nishikawa was indeed in tonight’s 2IM final, posting 1:57.80 for 5th place.
While lithium extraction technologies generally focus on ways to get the essential metal out of the ground, there’s another source to mine: existing batteries that no longer work. A new technique could now make that process economically viable.
When it comes to energy storage in rechargeable batteries, it’s hard to beat lithium. As the lightest metal on the period table, it has an impressive energy density. It also sheds electrons more easily than any other metal, meaning it has the highest electrochemical potential. Additionally, it excels at storing and releasing energy repeatedly. Yet, while lithium is abundant on our planet, mining clean sources of it can be difficult, costly, and environmentally damaging.
So, to find other sources of the material, scientists have been turning to lithium-ion batteries that have reached the end of their lifespan, yet still have perfectly usable amounts of the metal inside. Last year, for example, we heard about a method of using microwaves to free up the lithium inside spent batteries. Still, even though spent batteries are in abundant supply, separating out the lithium from the other materials they contain can also be an expensive proposition.
Enter the new technique from scientists at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. There, a team led by chemical and biomolecular engineering professor Xiao Su, has been spending time disassembling batteries and then submerging them in an organic solvent. This leads to a brine that contains lithium as well as other metals present in the batteries.
To harvest the lithium, the team developed a special electrode created from a copolymer consisting of molecules that attach to lithium and those that respond to an electrical current. When placed inside the brine and electrified, it sucked only lithium from the solution like a sponge, leaving other metals behind.
Not only was the method effective at separating out and recovering lithium, but the electrode was able to maintain its conductivity for over 500 cycles. What’s more, the researchers say the method is much more affordable than other battery-based lithium-harvesting techniques, costing about US$12.70 per kilogram of lithium recovered.
That’s in comparison to acid leaching, which runs about $81-462 per kilogram and produces chemical waste, and high-heat smelting, which costs $36-126 per kilogram and is more inefficient at separating out lithium from other elements. Based on these findings, the team says its method could be the first commercially viable way to recapture lithium from dead batteries.
Indeed, according to Daily Metal Prices, lithium costs $13.17 per kilo on the open market as of the time of writing. So this method actually comes out cheaper than just buying the stuff.
The researchers indicate that their work was designed as a proof-of-concept study and believe more efforts should now be put into scaling and refining their discovery.
“These results help highlight the broad applicability of electrochemical separations for metal recycling, not only in water, but also from organic solvents that are commonly used to leach waste batteries,” concludes Su. “We envision this work helping establish a more circular, sustainable supply chain for lithium, enhancing supply security and potentially reducing the environmental impacts associated with other forms of lithium extraction, such as mining.”