Company Description
RecycLiCo Battery Materials Inc. (OTCQB: AMYZF), also referenced as RECYCLICO BATTERY MATLS, is described as a critical minerals refining and lithium-ion battery upcycling company. According to the company’s public disclosures, RecycLiCo focuses on the use of advanced hydrometallurgical technologies to process mined ore and to upcycle lithium-ion battery materials. Its stated objective is to recover battery-ready critical minerals that can re-enter industrial and energy-storage supply chains.
The company notes that its processes are designed to efficiently recover lithium, cobalt, nickel, manganese, copper and other critical minerals from end-of-life batteries, production scrap and mined ore. These recovered materials are described as high-purity and battery-ready, suitable for use in commercial, industrial and military products. By targeting both mined ore and secondary feedstocks such as black mass and manufacturing scrap, RecycLiCo positions its technology as feedstock-agnostic within the broader critical minerals and battery materials space.
RecycLiCo states that its business focus aligns with global efforts to create future-ready and responsible supply chains, including the movement to strengthen domestic sourcing of critical materials in North America. Company communications emphasize the role of its technology and projects in supporting circular supply chains, resource recovery and domestic critical mineral supply for energy storage and other industrial applications.
The company is headquartered in Delta, British Columbia, and is listed on multiple markets, including the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol AMY, the OTCQB under the symbol AMYZF, and the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol ID4. Through these listings, RecycLiCo provides investors access to a business that is focused on mid-stream critical mineral refining and lithium-ion battery material upcycling.
Business focus and technology
RecycLiCo describes itself as a critical minerals refining company that specializes in hydrometallurgical processing. Hydrometallurgical technologies use aqueous chemistry to extract and refine metals from various feedstocks. In RecycLiCo’s case, these feedstocks include mined ore, end-of-life lithium-ion batteries, black mass and production scrap. The company’s communications highlight that its processes are designed to efficiently recover battery-ready lithium, cobalt, nickel and manganese, and in some contexts also copper and other critical minerals.
The company has referred to its approach as feedstock-agnostic, meaning its refining technology is intended to handle a variety of input materials. This includes material from mining operations as well as scrap and end-of-life batteries from the battery and energy-storage value chain. RecycLiCo also references a patented, closed-loop minerals and metals refining process, which it describes as capable of transforming diverse feedstocks into high-purity materials that can be used in a range of downstream applications.
In addition to its refining and upcycling activities, RecycLiCo has indicated that it maintains a portfolio of legacy mining assets. The company has stated that it retains specialized consulting support to manage and maintain these legacy mining assets, including oversight, regulatory compliance and strategic planning for that portfolio, while it advances the commercialization of its critical materials recovery technologies.
Projects, facilities and development activities
RecycLiCo has announced plans and steps toward expanding its research and process-development capabilities. The company has reported that it is developing a new research and process-development laboratory in Delta, British Columbia. It has disclosed that construction permit applications for this laboratory have been approved by local government, and that early construction preparation has begun. The company has stated that the facility is intended to support advancement of its critical minerals and metals resource-recovery technologies, enhance operational readiness for commercial deployment, and expand its ability to refine processes in response to evolving market and industry demands.
RecycLiCo has also announced that it retained Rain City Industrial to lead the design and construction of this new laboratory facility at its headquarters and operations center in Delta, British Columbia. According to the company, the laboratory is being designed with flexibility to accommodate multiple stages of research, process testing and product qualification. The company has indicated that the facility is expected to play a role in supporting its Clean Spot™ technology, which it describes as enabling efficient recovery of lithium, nickel, cobalt, manganese and other critical minerals and metals from mined ore, black mass and production scrap.
Beyond its laboratory initiatives, RecycLiCo has highlighted a Memorandum of Understanding involving its wholly owned U.S. subsidiary, RecycLiCo US Mineral Recovery, Inc. Under this MOU, the subsidiary and Alaska Energy Metals Corporation plan to assess the use of RecycLiCo’s hydrometallurgical processing technology on metal concentrates derived from AEMC’s polymetallic Nikolai deposit in Alaska. The company has stated that this work will begin with testing concentrate samples to evaluate the amenability of recovering nickel and other accessory metals using RecycLiCo’s expertise in hydrometallurgical refinement.
Role in critical mineral and battery supply chains
RecycLiCo’s public statements frame the company as part of efforts to strengthen domestic supply chains for critical minerals and metals, particularly in North America. The company has referenced a transition from a venture-stage battery recycler toward becoming a contributor to domestic supply chains for critical minerals that support industrial needs and national security. It has also emphasized that the United States has significant critical mineral deposits but limited domestic mid-stream processing capacity, and has presented its technology as a way to help address this gap.
The company has linked its activities to broader themes such as circular supply chains, responsible critical mineral sourcing, decarbonization, resource independence and circular-economy initiatives. It has participated in industry conferences focused on the battery supply chain, where it has highlighted its feedstock-agnostic technology as a scalable approach to regional supply shortages and sustainability mandates. Through these communications, RecycLiCo positions its refining and upcycling processes as part of the infrastructure needed to support energy storage and broader industrial applications that depend on lithium, nickel, cobalt, manganese, copper and related materials.
Corporate governance and shareholder engagement
RecycLiCo has reported on shareholder meetings and governance developments, including annual general meetings of shareholders where directors are elected and auditors are appointed. The company has disclosed that shareholders have voted on board recommendations and that it has appointed and retained directors with experience in financial markets, capital markets, mining and resource sectors. It has also noted that it uses an omnibus equity incentive plan and has granted stock options under that plan.
The company has emphasized communication with shareholders through management information circulars, open letters from its interim chief executive officer and participation in investor-focused events. It has stated that it is focused on transparency, responsible research and development, and long-term value creation, and that it engages proxy solicitation and shareholder communications advisors to support shareholder voting processes.
Capital markets and listings
RecycLiCo Battery Materials Inc. is listed on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol AMY, on the OTCQB market under the symbol AMYZF and on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol ID4. These listings provide access for investors in Canada, the United States and Europe to a company that describes its primary business as critical minerals refining and lithium-ion battery material upcycling.
According to its disclosures, the company also maintains a wholly owned U.S. subsidiary, RecycLiCo US Mineral Recovery, Inc., which is involved in initiatives related to domestic critical metal supply chains. Through its listed securities and reported projects, RecycLiCo presents itself as participating in the mining, refining and battery materials segments of the broader mining, quarrying and oil and gas extraction sector.
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SEC Filings
No SEC filings available for RecycLiCo Batter.