STOCK TITAN

Aqua Metals Advances Headwaters ARC, Planned Midwest Battery Recycling and Critical Minerals Recovery Campus

(Moderate)
(Positive)
Tags

Aqua Metals (NASDAQ: AQMS) is advancing to final site-specific diligence and negotiations for its planned Headwaters ARC battery recycling and critical minerals recovery campus in the U.S. Midwest.

The targeted site includes an existing ~150,000 sq. ft. facility and 50+ acres, offering over seven times the building footprint and more than ten times the land area of the previously planned Sierra ARC. Headwaters ARC is planned as a phased LFP-focused preprocessing and AquaRefining™ platform, supported by capital-efficient structures and validated by more than 5,000 operating hours at Aqua Metals’ Innovation Center and pilot plant.

Loading...
Loading translation...

AI-generated analysis. How Rhea-AI works. Not financial advice.

Positive

  • Targeted Headwaters ARC site offers ~150,000 sq. ft. facility and 50+ acres
  • Planned campus exceeds Sierra ARC scale by >7x building and >10x land
  • Phased development approach aims to align capital deployment with commercial milestones
  • AquaRefining™ validated with 5,000+ operating hours on LFP feedstocks
  • Engagement of Newmark to evaluate third-party funding of real estate and infrastructure
  • Focus on growing LFP scrap market, projected to rise ~15x by 2030

Negative

  • Project remains subject to diligence, site acquisition, financing, and permitting
  • Phase 1 and Phase 2 timing depends on timely financing and approvals
  • Real estate and infrastructure funding may involve long-term triple-net lease obligations

What This Means

The Headwaters ARC plan outlines a larger Midwest campus with existing infrastructure, proximity to ...
Analysis

The Headwaters ARC plan outlines a larger Midwest campus with existing infrastructure, proximity to six LFP gigafactories, and phased deployment backed by capital-light structures, setting a roadmap that still depends on financing, permitting, and execution milestones.

Key Figures

Facility size: 150,000 square feet Site acreage: 50+ acres Building scale vs Sierra ARC: 7x footprint +5 more
8 metrics
Facility size 150,000 square feet Existing industrial facility in Midwest development opportunity
Site acreage 50+ acres Land associated with Midwest Headwaters ARC opportunity
Building scale vs Sierra ARC 7x footprint More than seven times existing building footprint of Sierra ARC
Land scale vs Sierra ARC 10x land area More than 10 times land area of previously planned Sierra ARC
Nearby gigafactories 6 projects Headwaters ARC within short driving distance of six major LFP gigafactories
LFP scrap growth 15x by 2030 Expected increase in recyclable LFP manufacturing scrap in region
Operating hours 5,000+ hours Cumulative AquaRefining operating time at Innovation Center and pilot plant
LFP capacity growth 15x by 2030 Announced North American LFP cell manufacturing capacity increase

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: Jun 30 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment 24h Move Catalyst
Jun 30 Conference participation Positive -2.7% Participation in NAATBatt 2026 recycling and lifecycle management workshop.
Jun 11 DOE partnership Positive -16.3% Selected as industrial partner on DOE-funded INL program for recycling.
May 14 Q1 2026 update Positive -10.8% Reported progress on commercialization and expanded platform capabilities.
May 07 Earnings date notice Neutral -6.0% Scheduled Q1 2026 results release and investor conference call.
Apr 08 Supply chain partnership Positive +7.7% Lion Energy partnership with American Battery Factory for U.S. LFP cells.

24h Move is the share-price change in the day after each event; other market factors may also have contributed.

Pattern Detected

Recent Aqua Metals news skewed positive but often coincided with negative next-day price moves, with only one out of five events seeing a positive reaction.

Regulatory & Risk Context

Active S-3 Shelf · $12,857,224 · Short Interest: 12.37%
Shelf Active
Short Interest
12.37% of float
0% 15% 30%+
moderate as of 2026-06-15 Days to cover: 1.28

Short interest sits at a moderately elevated level, suggesting room for incremental volatility and positioning swings if news flow or liquidity conditions change.

Active S-3 Shelf Registration 2025-10-24
$12,857,224 registered capacity

An effective S-3 resale registration covers warrants for up to 1,133,794 shares; Aqua Metals would receive cash only if the holder exercises these warrants, not from secondary sales.

Key Terms

lfp, black mass, hydrometallurgical, triple-net lease, +1 more
5 terms
lfp technical
"with an initial strategic focus on lithium iron phosphate, or LFP, materials."
LFP stands for lithium iron phosphate, a type of rechargeable battery chemistry used in electric vehicles and energy storage systems. It trades slightly less energy density for greater safety, longer cycle life and lower cost, so investors watch LFP adoption like choosing a durable, affordable tool instead of a high-performance but fragile one; changes in its use can affect battery makers, automakers and energy-storage economics.
black mass technical
"battery preprocessing systems to produce high-specification black mass, aluminum fines, and copper fines"
Black mass is the dark, powdery mixture produced when end-of-life lithium‑ion batteries are shredded and processed; it contains concentrated metals and active battery materials such as lithium, nickel, cobalt, manganese, copper and graphite. It matters to investors because it is the key raw material for recycling these valuable metals—like extracting coins from old electronics—so its availability, purity and processing costs affect supply, commodity prices, and the economics of battery makers, miners and recyclers.
hydrometallurgical technical
"advanced hydrometallurgical refining within a single expandable regional platform."
Hydrometallurgical describes methods that use water-based chemistry to dissolve, separate and recover metals from ores, concentrates or recycled materials, much like dissolving sugar to separate it from tea and then collecting the sugar back out. It matters to investors because these processes determine how much metal a project can realistically produce, the operating cost and environmental footprint, and therefore influence revenue potential, capital needs and regulatory risk.
triple-net lease financial
"through a long-term triple-net lease or similar arrangement, thereby reducing"
A triple-net lease is a rental agreement where the tenant pays the base rent plus the property's operating expenses—typically taxes, insurance, and maintenance—so the landlord receives mostly a steady, predictable cash payment. For investors, it matters because it can act like a low-maintenance, bond-like income stream with clearer expense exposure, but returns depend on the tenant’s financial strength and long-term ability to cover those extra costs.
gigafactory technical
"within a short driving distance of six major LFP gigafactory projects, positioning"
A gigafactory is a very large manufacturing facility designed to produce high volumes of complex products—most commonly batteries or electric vehicle components—at industrial scale. For investors, it matters because such plants can sharply lower per-unit costs through economies of scale, speed up a company's ability to meet demand, and serve as a visible sign of growth and capital intensity; think of it as moving from a home kitchen to an automated factory line to serve a whole city.

AI-generated analysis. How Rhea-AI works. Not financial advice.

See more from StockTitan in Google Search and AI answers. Adds StockTitan as a preferred source · opens Google
Add on Google

Company advances final site-specific diligence for Midwest Headwaters ARC development opportunity with existing industrial infrastructure, substantial expansion acreage, and strategic proximity to rapidly growing LFP battery manufacturing capacity

RENO, Nev., July 07, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Aqua Metals, Inc. (NASDAQ: AQMS), a pioneer in sustainable critical minerals recovery and lithium battery recycling, today announced it has advanced to final site-specific diligence and negotiations for Headwaters ARC, the Company's planned commercial battery recycling and critical minerals recovery campus in the Midwest battery manufacturing corridor.

Headwaters ARC is designed as a significantly larger and more expandable platform than the Company’s previously announced Sierra ARC project. Aqua Metals has advanced to final site-specific diligence on a Midwest development opportunity that includes an existing industrial facility of approximately 150,000 square feet and approximately 50 or more acres of land, providing more than seven times the existing building footprint and more than 10 times the land area of the previously planned Sierra ARC. As part of its disciplined commercial planning process, the Company continues to evaluate development sequencing, financing structures, and implementation pathways intended to support the most efficient path to commercial deployment. The Company expects to announce its selected development path during the current quarter, subject to completion of diligence, negotiations, financing, and customary approvals.

The planned campus is expected to begin with rapid deployment of commercially proven battery preprocessing systems to produce high-specification black mass, aluminum fines, and copper fines with an initial strategic focus on lithium iron phosphate, or LFP, materials. Aqua Metals then intends to progressively integrate its proprietary AquaRefining™ technology to recover battery-grade lithium carbonate and iron phosphate from the black mass produced, creating a phased development pathway from preprocessing and materials production into higher-value domestic critical minerals recovery.

The Headwaters ARC name reflects Aqua Metals' strategic intent to move upstream in the battery recycling value chain by integrating feedstock aggregation, preprocessing, black mass production, and advanced hydrometallurgical refining within a single expandable regional platform. By verticalizing into preprocessing and locating near the emerging Great Lakes battery manufacturing base, Aqua Metals believes Headwaters ARC can reduce feedstock and scaling risk, create revenue opportunities, and establish a more resilient commercial model capable of supporting commercial activity across both stronger and weaker lithium pricing environments.

“This represents an important milestone in Aqua Metals' next-generation battery recycling growth strategy,” said Steve Cotton, President and CEO of Aqua Metals. “The rapid growth of LFP battery manufacturing in the United States is creating an urgent need for regional recycling, preprocessing, and lithium recovery infrastructure. The Midwest development opportunity under final site-specific diligence would place Headwaters ARC within a short driving distance of six major LFP gigafactory projects, positioning Aqua Metals to serve what we believe will be one of the fastest-growing and most underserved sources of domestic battery manufacturing scrap while leveraging existing high-quality industrial infrastructure to accelerate deployment, reduce logistics costs, improve project economics, and shorten time to market.”

Aqua Metals is completing final diligence on a Midwest development opportunity while maintaining strategic flexibility through development sequencing, financing structures, and implementation pathways. The Company's site selection process has prioritized locations that combine existing industrial infrastructure, access to battery manufacturing customers, utility readiness, favorable project economics, long-term expansion potential, and strong engagement from local and state economic development partners. The Company believes these attributes can help accelerate project development and support efficient commercial deployment of the Headwaters ARC platform.

Following a period of significant volatility and dislocation across lithium and battery materials markets in 2024 and 2025, Aqua Metals maintained a measured approach to commercial deployment while continuing to validate its technology, evaluate site and partner options, and preserve strategic flexibility. With lithium markets showing improved stability and domestic LFP manufacturing capacity continuing to scale, the Company believes the timing is now appropriate to advance Headwaters ARC.

The Company is planning a phased capital deployment strategy intended to incrementally de-risk project development while aligning capital investment with commercial execution milestones. Subject to completion of diligence, site acquisition, financing, permitting, and customary approvals, Phase 1 is expected to focus on infrastructure readiness, and deployment of initial feedstock receiving and processing capabilities, with a strategic focus on lithium iron phosphate, or LFP, materials. Phase 2 is expected to expand processing capacity and commercial operations, including the production of black mass and recovered metals, while building strategic feedstock and offtake relationships. These initial phases are intended to establish early commercial activity, generate revenue and cash flow, and support the subsequent deployment of AquaRefining™ as the Company advances toward its broader Headwaters ARC commercial platform. Assuming timely receipt of required financing and completion of site-related approvals, the Company expects Phase 1 activities to begin following site acquisition, with Phase 1 and Phase 2 development milestones targeted over the following several quarters.

Aqua Metals intends to initially focus Headwaters ARC on LFP battery materials, a chemistry the Company believes is entering a period of rapid domestic growth as new gigafactory capacity, energy storage demand, AI data center infrastructure, and next-generation electric vehicle platforms scale across North America. Based on the Company's market analysis, informed by third-party industry research, recyclable LFP manufacturing scrap from major regional cell production is expected to increase approximately 15x by 2030, creating a significant and increasingly localized need for preprocessing, black mass production, and lithium recovery capacity near battery manufacturing centers. Unlike nickel- and cobalt-bearing chemistries, LFP materials require an economically efficient, lithium-focused recycling pathway that maximizes value recovery across aluminum, copper, black mass, and lithium products, capable of operating through commodity cycles while supporting domestic supply chain resilience. Aqua Metals believes this represents a particularly compelling and currently underserved recycling opportunity.

Aqua Metals is currently evaluating strategic preprocessing equipment partners with multiple commercial systems already operating at industrial scale and expects to announce its selected Phase 1 and Phase 2 equipment and strategic processing partner in the near term. The Company is seeking to structure the initial preprocessing phase to include not only equipment supply and installation support, but also commercial collaboration around black mass product specifications, feedstock acceptance, and potential offtake pathways.

The planned AquaRefining™ deployment draws on capabilities validated across more than 5,000 cumulative operating hours at the Company's mature Innovation Center and pilot/demonstration plant at the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center, including demonstrated recovery of battery-grade lithium carbonate and technical-grade iron phosphate from LFP feedstocks, with lithium carbonate independently confirmed to battery-grade specifications.

Aqua Metals' initial commercial strategy is focused on recycling LFP materials and recovering battery-grade lithium carbonate from black mass, with the potential to add additional chemistries and recovery pathways over time. Following the planned scaling of preprocessing operations and lithium carbonate production, Aqua Metals expects to add processing capabilities for nickel manganese cobalt, or NMC, and other lithium-ion battery chemistries by leveraging its patented AquaRefining™ technologies, which have been proven at demonstration plant scale. Aqua Metals believes this platform can provide flexibility to produce multiple end-product forms based on feedstock composition and customer offtake requirements, potentially including metals, carbonates, sulfates, and other critical materials.

Aqua Metals is also advancing commercial discussions with domestic feedstock, logistics, and offtake partners to support the Headwaters ARC development plan. The Company is pursuing agreements designed to support supply of LFP battery packs and manufacturing scrap, offtake pathways for aluminum and copper fines generated through preprocessing, and commercialization pathways for high-specification black mass and recovered critical materials.

To support project development and capital formation, Aqua Metals has engaged Newmark’s Advanced Manufacturing Practice Group for the Headwaters ARC project. Newmark is advising the Company on capital formation strategies, and strategic real estate and project advisory services, including evaluation of structures under which third-party real estate and infrastructure capital could fund the acquisition of the land and building, certain tenant improvements, and other site-related development costs. The Company believes these structures, if completed, could address a substantial portion of the capital required for the initial phases of Headwaters ARC through a long-term triple-net lease or similar arrangement, thereby reducing the upfront corporate capital required from Aqua Metals. In parallel, Aqua Metals is working with strategic equipment and technology suppliers to evaluate staged deployment models and commercial terms intended to align equipment-related payments with project milestones, commissioning, and commercial ramp-up. Together, these capital-efficient approaches are intended to allow the Company to focus its corporate capital stack on operations, working capital, and staged commercial execution while preserving flexibility as site diligence, project budgeting, and capital formation efforts advance.

“Headwaters ARC is being designed to reduce execution risk and upfront capital intensity compared to traditional greenfield battery recycling developments,” Cotton continued. “By starting with commercially proven preprocessing equipment, leveraging existing industrial infrastructure, and working with strategic partners across equipment, feedstock, offtake, real estate, and capital formation, we believe Aqua Metals can build a scalable commercial platform while preserving flexibility as domestic battery supply chains continue to develop.”

LFP battery chemistry is expected to represent an increasing share of U.S. battery manufacturing capacity due to its cost, safety, and energy storage advantages, particularly in electric vehicles, AI data center infrastructure, and grid-scale energy storage systems. As LFP battery production continues scaling in North America, the industry is expected to require efficient, regionally integrated recycling and materials recovery infrastructure capable of operating economically across evolving battery chemistries and commodity cycles.

The Company believes Headwaters ARC aligns with regional economic development priorities by supporting domestic critical minerals production, advanced manufacturing investment, and the creation of high-quality technical and operating jobs within a cleaner, safer industrial environment.

The proposed development initiative remains subject to completion of diligence activities, negotiation of definitive agreements, permitting, financing, and other customary approvals.

Conceptual rendering of a potential Headwaters ARC facility layout. Final site configuration and development plans remain subject to diligence, negotiations, financing, permitting, and customary approvals.

Figure 1: Conceptual rendering of a potential Headwaters ARC facility layout. Final site configuration and development plans remain subject to diligence, negotiations, financing, permitting, and customary approvals.

Announced North American LFP battery cell manufacturing capacity is expected to increase approximately 15x by 2030, supporting growing demand for localized recycling and materials recovery infrastructure.

Figure 2: Announced North American LFP battery cell manufacturing capacity is expected to increase approximately 15x by 2030, supporting growing demand for localized recycling and materials recovery infrastructure.

About Aqua Metals

Aqua Metals, Inc. (NASDAQ: AQMS) is focused on developing and commercializing sustainable battery recycling and critical minerals recovery solutions for the growing domestic battery supply chain. The Company operates a mature Innovation Center and pilot/demonstration plant at the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center, where it has validated its patented AquaRefining™ technology platform across more than 5,000 cumulative operating hours and demonstrated recovery of battery-grade lithium carbonate from lithium iron phosphate, or LFP, battery materials.

AquaRefining™ is an electrified hydrometallurgical process designed to recover valuable materials from lithium-ion battery feedstocks while regenerating and recycling key process chemicals. Unlike conventional hydrometallurgical approaches that can generate large volumes of sodium sulfate waste, AquaRefining™ is designed to eliminate sodium sulfate as a principal waste stream, reducing disposal burden, reagent consumption, operating complexity, and associated costs while supporting a cleaner and safer advanced manufacturing environment.

Aqua Metals is advancing a phased commercial strategy that begins with battery preprocessing and black mass production and is designed to progressively integrate AquaRefining™ for recovery of battery-grade critical materials, including lithium carbonate from LFP battery materials. Over time, the Company intends to expand its platform to support additional battery chemistries and flexible end-product forms based on feedstock composition and customer offtake requirements. The Company’s approach is intended to support domestic critical minerals production while creating high-quality technical and operating jobs in a cleaner and safer industrial setting.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding Headwaters ARC, site selection, final site-specific diligence, negotiations, timing of a final site announcement, expected site characteristics, project development, phased deployment plans, preprocessing operations, black mass production, aluminum fines and copper fines production, AquaRefining™ deployment, recovery of battery-grade lithium carbonate, future processing of LFP, NMC and other lithium-ion battery chemistries, potential production of metals, carbonates, sulfates and other critical materials, equipment supplier selection, feedstock access, offtake discussions, commercial partnerships, strategic relationships, utility availability, permitting, engineering, construction and capital cost validation, financing discussions, capital formation strategies, potential non-dilutive structures, real estate and project advisory activities, expansion opportunities, future operations, revenue opportunities, market demand, lithium market stability, LFP battery manufacturing growth, anticipated growth in recyclable battery manufacturing scrap, domestic battery supply chain development, potential reductions in waste streams, sodium sulfate elimination, reduced disposal burden, reagent consumption, operating complexity and associated costs, workplace safety, job creation, and market opportunities related to critical minerals, battery recycling, energy storage, electric vehicles, AI data center infrastructure, grid-scale storage, and advanced manufacturing.

Forward-looking statements are based on current expectations, estimates, assumptions, and projections and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the Company’s ability to complete diligence activities, secure long-term site control, negotiate and execute definitive agreements, obtain financing, obtain permits and approvals, validate site utilities and infrastructure, complete engineering and cost validation, select and deploy commercial equipment, secure feedstock and offtake agreements, develop and operate commercial facilities, validate technologies at commercial scale, manage commodity price volatility, respond to changing market conditions, protect intellectual property, maintain regulatory compliance, achieve anticipated waste reduction and cost reduction benefits, and execute its phased development strategy. Additional risks and uncertainties are described in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 31, 2026 and subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Aqua Metals undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking statements except as required by law.

Contacts

For Media and Investor Inquiries: aquametals@icrinc.com

Photos accompanying this announcement are available at

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/25e5ce7b-6aab-4cc8-814d-de8a1cef46e8

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/ed023195-0881-47a6-b0a7-4e75436014da


FAQ

What is Aqua Metals (NASDAQ: AQMS) planning with the Headwaters ARC project announced in July 2026?

Aqua Metals is planning Headwaters ARC as a Midwest battery recycling and critical minerals recovery campus. According to Aqua Metals, the project will integrate feedstock aggregation, preprocessing, black mass production, and AquaRefining™ to recover lithium carbonate and iron phosphate from LFP materials in phased stages.

Where will Aqua Metals’ Headwaters ARC lithium battery recycling campus be located and how large is the site?

Headwaters ARC is planned in the U.S. Midwest battery manufacturing corridor at a site under final diligence. According to Aqua Metals, the development opportunity includes an existing ~150,000 square foot industrial building and approximately 50 or more acres of land for long-term expansion.

How does Headwaters ARC compare in scale to Aqua Metals’ previously planned Sierra ARC project (AQMS)?

Headwaters ARC is planned as a significantly larger and more expandable platform than Sierra ARC. According to Aqua Metals, the targeted Midwest site offers more than seven times the existing building footprint and over ten times the land area of the previously planned Sierra ARC campus.

What is the phased development plan for Aqua Metals’ Headwaters ARC LFP recycling facility?

Headwaters ARC will follow a phased development plan starting with preprocessing and then AquaRefining™ integration. According to Aqua Metals, Phase 1 focuses on infrastructure and initial LFP feedstock processing, while Phase 2 expands capacity, black mass output, and recovered metals ahead of full critical minerals recovery.

How does Aqua Metals plan to finance the Headwaters ARC battery recycling campus?

Aqua Metals is pursuing capital-efficient financing structures for Headwaters ARC. According to Aqua Metals, Newmark is advising on strategies including potential third-party funding of land, building, and site development under a long-term triple-net lease or similar arrangement, plus staged equipment payment models.

What technology will Aqua Metals use at Headwaters ARC to recover lithium from LFP batteries?

Headwaters ARC will use Aqua Metals’ proprietary AquaRefining™ hydrometallurgical technology for lithium recovery. According to Aqua Metals, this process has over 5,000 operating hours of validation, including demonstrated recovery of battery-grade lithium carbonate and technical-grade iron phosphate from LFP feedstocks.

When could operations begin at Aqua Metals’ Headwaters ARC project, and what are the key conditions?

Initial activities are expected to begin after site acquisition, subject to several conditions. According to Aqua Metals, Phase 1 and Phase 2 milestones are targeted over subsequent quarters, contingent on completing diligence, securing financing, obtaining permits, and receiving other customary approvals.