1. Introduction
Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) poses significant ecological challenges, as does traditional gold production through mining. However, gold can also be produced through the recycling of WEEE, providing a more environmentally friendly alternative that avoids gold mining and reduces WEEE.
According to the UN waste monitor, around 62 billion kg of WEEE was generated in 2022, of which only 13.8 billion was recycled in compliance with official standards [
1].
Urban mining offers a huge potential for WEEE. While the concentration of gold in primary ores is just a few grams per ton, in WEEE, gold concentrations as high as 980 g/t in mobile phones or 420 g/t in printed circuit boards (PCBs) are common [
2,
3]. However, WEEE is a heterogeneous input material, with varying material compositions, forms and particle sizes. It is a complex input that requires different extractive technologies to ores [
4]. However, the actual global volumes of gold obtained through recycling are low, with only about 3% of annual gold production coming from WEEE recycling [
5]. Furthermore, technology appliances account for only around 7% of the annual global gold demand [
6].
The most common route for producing gold from WEEE on an industrial scale involves pyrometallurgical processing using a copper smelting process [
7]. Recycling gold from WEEE is also a prime example of Reuter’s “metal wheel”, where copper metallurgy serves as the enabler of the circular economy in gold recovery from WEEE [
8]. WEEE is typically co-processed alongside sulfide copper concentrates in existing copper smelters, where it is added as an additional feedstock—resulting in the combustion of the plastics contained in the WEEE. The plastic fraction also serves as an energy carrier and reducing agent in the process. The majority of gold recovered from formal recycling comes from around ten companies, including Mitsubishi Materials Corporation (MMC) and DOWA ECO-SYSTEM in Japan, Aurubis in Germany, Boliden Group in Sweden, Glencore in Canada, and Umicore in Belgium (for more details please find
Supplement Table S2).
The informal recycling of WEEE, such as in Accra Market, Agbogbloshie (Ghana), involves burning WEEE to remove plastics and recover metals under hazardous conditions. While the exact fate of the recovered metal fractions is not fully known, the UN Waste Monitor states that some valuable materials are sold to companies in the Global North for further recycling. Additionally, some small-scale informal recyclers use toxic chemicals to directly retrieve the gold from, for example, PCBs. This process is carried out in their houses or backyards without sufficient safeguards for human health or the environment [
9,
10].
According to Nuss and Eckelman, gold is among the metals with the highest specific CO2eq per mass in the periodic table, with a CO
2eq of around 30,000 CO
2eq/kg Au [
11,
12]. Surprisingly, the annual impact on climate change from copper mining (≈182 Mt CO
2eq/a) 27 billion kg are mined annually similar to the impact of gold mining (236 Mt CO
2eq/a) when using the market datasets in ecoinvent v.3.11 [
6,
13]. The recycling of high-value EoL scrap on the other hand is known to have a very low carbon footprint of around 40 kg CO
2eq/kg Au [
14].
A common method of quantifying environmental impacts along the life cycle of products and materials is life cycle assessment (LCA). A literature screening of LCA studies in the field of WEEE yielded three prior studies performing a thorough analysis of gold. All three studies are comparative LCAs that analyze the environmental impact of different routes of producing gold from WEEE.
In a study that aimed to identify the most eco-friendly recycling technique, He et al. presented LCA results for the mechanical, pyro-, hydro-, electro- and biometallurgical recycling of gold from PCBs [
15]. Unfortunately, the study did not include their LCI tables, making it difficult to analyze their results. The impact of the pyrometallurgical recycling route on climate change is reported to be 5840 kg CO
2eq/kg Au. The impact of all the different routes lies between 1420 kg CO
2eq/kg Au and 35,400 kg CO
2eq/kg Au.
Rezaee et al. performed a comparative LCA on six different hydrometallurgical processes used to recycle gold from PCB powder [
16]. Their results show that the climate impact lies between 1.17 kg CO
2eq/kg PCB and 46.6 kg CO
2eq/kg PCB. Unfortunately, this study did not report their results per metal. Based on the composition of the input material, we estimated the CO
2eq for the production of gold. Using economic allocation, the carbon footprint is between 10,000 kg CO
2eq/kg Au and 400,000 kg CO
2eq/kg Au. The lowest result is slightly higher compared to those of He et al., who found that for hydrometallurgical recycling, the carbon footprint is 7860 kg CO
2eq/kg Au [
15].
Li et al. compared two different recycling methods, the hydro- and the pyrometallurgical routes, with their own novel technique using LCA [
7]. The results showed that their novel approach had the lowest CO
2eq, with around 1230 kg CO
2eq/kg Au compared to 17,900 kg CO
2eq/kg Au for the hydro- and 57,900 CO
2eq/kg Au for the pyrometallurgical route. It is not exactly clear why the values for pyrometallurgical recycling in this study are so high. One major difference between this and the other studies is that the authors do not use the cut-off approach; therefore, the copper scrap added to the smelter enters the system with an additional environmental burden.
In this study, we conducted an LCA analysis of the carbon footprint of recycling gold from WEEE through pyrometallurgical recycling in copper smelters, the most commonly used method. We highlight the challenge of decarbonizing WEEE recycling due to the fossil-based plastics embedded within the scrap input, which are burned during processing. As a result, standard decarbonization measures, such as using renewables in the energy mix, have limited effectiveness. We use scenario analyses to explore alternative solutions.
4. Discussion
This study explores ways to reduce the climate impact of recycling gold from WEEE. We found that recycling gold from WEEE by the most common process route, i.e., the pyro-metallurgical route, has an impact on climate change of around 2000 kg CO2eq/kg Au. This result depends strongly on the allocation method used.
The recycling of gold from WEEE in a primary copper smelter is a good example of the effect of subjective allocation choices on the results. If the purpose of the integrated copper smelter is to obtain a new raw material input with high metal grades to produce more metals and have a higher revenue, then the environmental impact should probably be allocated on an economic basis. In this case study, the revenue contributed by palladium to the product basket is the highest, followed by gold, silver and then copper. Although the plant is a copper smelter and copper is the material produced in the greatest quantities, a big part of the revenue is generated by the more expensive metals; therefore, the allocation should also follow this economic logic.
In the present case, the CO2eq is mainly influenced by the fossil carbon bound in the plastic fraction of the WEEE and the energy carrier used. The latter could be improved by switching to renewable energies such as run-of-river electricity and green hydrogen. Meanwhile, for the CO2eq of plastic combustion, more complex and tedious solutions are needed. To minimize emissions from the plastic fraction of the WEEE, the plastic could be removed prior to smelting in a mechanical or a hydrometallurgical process. However, it would then have to be ensured that the fossil carbon content in these plastic fractions does not end up as CO2 emissions downstream (unless, e.g., a co-product such as heat production results from waste treatment).
The fact that switching to a renewable scenario does not substantially reduce the impact on the climate (since CO2 emissions stem from the burning of the fossil carbon in the plastic) has broader implications for the industry. If copper smelters seek to become part of the circular economy (CE) by increasing their WEEE recycling, they will paradoxically increase their carbon footprint. This suggests that limiting WEEE recycling and instead producing copper from primary material using non-fossil energy might be a more promising path to achieving carbon-neutral copper. However, this leads to a conflict of objectives between CE and CO2 emissions.
In countries where the landfilling of WEEE is not permitted (as in Germany), the WEEE that is not recycled most likely ends up in waste incinerators and releases the same amount of CO2 emissions as in the pyrometallurgical method, losing large quantities of metal in the process. This would be a fruitful area for further work. A study could compare the system described in this study with an alternative system of disposing the WEEE in household scrap using the existing infrastructure for collecting, sorting and incinerating scrap and then extracting the metals from the fly ash as, for example, Umicore in Hoboken, Belgium does.
The present study has found that district heating is generally an effective means of reducing the carbon footprint of gold from WEEE. When system boundaries are extended to include the provision of waste heat from a WEEE recycling copper smelter to surrounding households using natural gas heating, the carbon footprint of the plant and thus of its products can be reduced by around 50%. The company Aurubis, which supplies heat for around 8000 households in HafenCity East in Germany and plans to significantly expand this by 2025, provides an illustration of what can be accomplished [
41].
A final potential means of reducing the CO
2 emissions generated by burning the plastic in WEEE would involve using carbon capture and storage, as exemplified at Amager Bakke in Copenhagen [
42,
43]. Its success depends on the stored carbon not being released at a later point in time.
All these solutions shift or postpone fossil CO2 emissions instead of eliminating them. A focus on the producer would open up a more radical solution: namely, not using fossil carbons in EEE in the first place, and instead using plastics derived from biogenic sources. This, of course, comes with its own set of problems (such as the “tank vs. plate debate”), which are outside the scope of this study.
In this study, a theoretical calculation was conducted to demonstrate that the transport of the gold produced from WEEE accounts for approximately 10% of CO2eq. Additionally, it was shown that the impact of the transport of the final product gold to the market on climate change is insignificant compared to the total CO2eq from recycling. This is in line with the market for gold in ecoinvent v.3.11 (cut-off), where the total impact of transport is 0.08 kg CO2eq/kg Au. This initial approximation was rather rudimentary and was based exclusively on secondary data. Further research would be beneficial in this regard to record the flows and distances more accurately, thereby facilitating a more comprehensive understanding of the issue of illegal exports.
This also applies to the district heating scenario, which is based on a very simplistic and theoretical calculation of the net usable heat. This would be a fruitful area for further work that studies thermodynamic modelling and the technical efficiencies in greater depth.
This study, as well as all others to our knowledge, lacks primary industry data. Consequently, future studies should aim to conduct a detailed analysis of on-site data in a copper smelter in a combined LCA model of the primary and secondary routes; this is in order to find further improvements that can reduce the total CO2 equivalent emissions of copper smelters.
5. Conclusions
WEEE poses significant environmental and health risks if not properly managed. At the same time, it contains economically valuable metals such as gold. Given the environmental and social challenges associated with gold mining, recovering gold from WEEE presents a clear win–win opportunity. However, the industry faces a unique challenge when applying common sustainability strategies.
A major contributor to the carbon footprint of WEEE recycling via the most common route is the combustion of embedded plastics, leading to the emission of approximately 2000 kg CO2-eq per kg of recovered gold. This is about forty times higher than the carbon footprint of high-value recycling (≈53 kg CO2eq/kg Au), which supplies nine times the market volume (1350 t Au/a). Since the plastics in WEEE are burned, transitioning to lower-carbon energy sources—one of the standard decarbonization strategies in the smelting industry—has a limited impact. This creates a dilemma: increasing circular economy (CE) efforts while simultaneously reducing CO2 emissions is counter-productive. A promising strategy to mitigate the climate impact of gold recycling from WEEE is utilizing waste heat from smelters to replace carbon-intensive heating systems in nearby facilities or communities. Further measures include reducing the plastic fraction in input materials, promoting biogenic plastics, or implementing CCS.
Nevertheless, it is important to recognize that the carbon footprint of gold from mining, at approximately 30,000 kg CO
2-eq/kg Au, is more than ten times higher that of current WEEE recycling [
12]. Additionally, WEEE presents broader environmental and health risks beyond CO
2 emissions from pyrometallurgical processing. If smelters do not recycle WEEE, the waste will likely end up in incinerators or landfills, generating similar emissions elsewhere, or be exported to the Global South, where it poses even greater hazards [
9,
10].
Future policies and pathways must take an integrated approach rather than focusing solely on increasing recycling rates. Sustainable solutions require the coordinated involvement of EEE producers, municipal waste management, smelting infrastructure, global socioeconomic interactions, and consumer behavior regarding usage, repair, and disposal. Only by considering these factors together instead of simply demanding specific recycling rates can a truly sustainable system for WEEE management be achieved.