PH7 Technologies Raises $25.6M

Illustration: Maura Kearns/Axios PH7 Technologies, a startup that extracts metals from recycled and mining materials, raised $25.6 million to scale its tech in mining, CEO Mohammad Doostmohammadi tells Axios Pro. Why it matters: Soaring demand for critical minerals like copper is leading to renewed interest in mining technologies. Zoom in: Fine Structure Ventures led the […]

pH7 logo on a white background

Illustration of Benjamin Franklin holding a pickaxe.

Illustration: Maura Kearns/Axios

PH7 Technologies, a startup that extracts metals from recycled and mining materials, raised $25.6 million
to scale its tech in mining, CEO Mohammad Doostmohammadi tells Axios Pro.

Why it matters: Soaring demand for critical minerals like copper is leading to renewed interest in mining
technologies.

Zoom in: Fine Structure Ventures led the initial close of the Series B round, and the VC arm of mining
giant BHP, BHP Ventures, joined as a strategic investor.

  • The company, based in Vancouver, British Columbia, expects the round to exceed $30 million following
    future closings.

How it works: PH7 Technologies has developed an electrochemical process that can pull metals out of
mining and recycling waste and materials without generating wastewater and using low voltage.

  • The company has a small commercial demonstration plant in Vancouver, processing 30 to 50 metric
    tons of materials from recycled waste per month, says Doostmohammadi.
  • The plant extracts metals like platinum, palladium, and rhodium from sources like old vehicle catalytic
    converters, diesel filters and industrial catalysts.

The company’s recycling metals plants can cost $10 million to $20 million, and its mine deployments can
be as little as $5 million.

  • PH7 plans to build a demonstration facility for the mining industry, extracting metals like copper from
    low-grade ores and tailings.

Zoom out: The extraction plants are meant to be built on-site at mining and recycling facilities,
developing a distributed system, compared to the mega smelters built around the world.

  • “The beauty of our process is that it’s localized so we can build these modular plants anywhere in the
    world, closer to the supply,” says Doostmohammadi.

The big picture: There’s a lot of demand for critical metals, used in things like data centers and batteries,
but China dominates the processing of them.

  • As a result, companies, investors and the U.S. government are trying to invest in domestic mineral
    supply chains and scale up next-gen technologies.
  • PH7 aims to build out mining facilities in Canada and Chile and recycling facilities in the U.S. and
    Japan.

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