An Italian family is selling most of its stake in an industrial waste disposal company to a private equity fund, in a deal that's being hailed as a sign of the country's shift to a circular economy.
The Orim family has controlled the company since 1982, when it began to recover raw materials, including rare earths and non-metallic materials, from industrial waste, reports the Wall Street Journal.
The new owner, Xenon Fund for Decarbonization and Circular Economy, says it plans to build a plant in Italy to recover those materials from spent batteries, reports the Local.
"The project would guarantee the possibility of obtaining a product free of harmful elements that can be marketed as a raw material in markets outside the European Union," says Xenon's Georg von Kriegsheim.
"Orim represents the only Italian company with this type of plant, capable of recovering non-precious metals and rare earths starting from exhausted catalysts through hydrometallurgical processes," he adds. Read the Entire Article
A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.
Dacy Rehding, an orphan who roamed the streets of Wyandotte looking for a playmate until it drove her mad, serves as the inspiration for Bloodbath on Biddle – this year’s Wyandotte Jaycees haunted house.