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Precious water and gold: New extraction methods for arid air and e-waste

The U.K.’s official coin-maker is recovering gold from old electronics

Up to 7% of the world’s gold, a crucial component of circuit boards, is hidden in e-waste. At a new facility in Wales, The Royal Mint is using a process patented by Canadian company Excir to extract that gold and make new products.

To remove the gold, electronic parts are submerged in a chemical bath. The powder that emerges is then melted into gold nuggets. The process works at room temperature, saving energy, and avoids the environmental cost of shipping waste overseas for recycling.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, technologies to recover precious resources range from a low-cost water harvester invented in Saudi Arabia, to the new factory in the United Kingdom that is taking gold from old electronics to make jewelry.

Annually, the plant can recover nearly 1,000 pounds of gold, an amount worth about $34 million as of early August.

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