https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2021/05/13/old-electric-cars-are-a-raw-material-of-the-future Skip to content * Menu * Weekly edition * Search Subscribe Sign in * Featured + Coronavirus + The Biden presidency + Climate change + Brexit + Daily briefing + The World in 2021 + 1843 magazine * Sections + The world this week + Leaders + Letters + Briefing + United States + The Americas + Asia + China + Middle East & Africa + Europe + Britain + International + Business + Finance & economics + Science & technology + Books & arts + Graphic detail + Obituary + Special reports + Technology Quarterly + Essay + By Invitation + Schools brief + The World If + Open Future + Prospero + The Economist Explains * More + Newsletters + Podcasts + Video + Subscriber events + iOS app + Android app + Executive courses * Manage my account * Sign out Search [ ] [20210515_std001] Scrapyards of tomorrow Old electric cars are a raw material of the future But they need to be designed to make recycling them easier Science & technologyMay 15th 2021 edition --------------------------------------------------------------------- May 13th 2021 * * * * CAR SALES have, generally speaking, plunged during the coronavirus epidemic. But there has been one bright spot. Electric vehicles (EVs) continue to grow in popularity. According to IHs Markit, a research firm, almost 2.5m battery-electric and plug-in-hybrid cars were sold around the world in 2020--and the company expects that number to grow by 70% this year. BloombergNEF, another researcher, reckons that by 2030 some 8% of the 1.4bn cars on the road will be electric, rising to more than 30% by 2040. It is not, moreover, just a matter of cars. There will also be electric lorries, buses, motorbikes, bicycles, scooters, ships and maybe even aircraft. And, when all of these machines come to the ends of their useful lives, they will need to be recycled. Listen to this story Your browser does not support the