The role of multi-stream recovery & separation providers
More than 4500 global manufacturing, infrastructure and technology brands have already confirmed to attend E-Waste World Expo and its three further co-located events, Battery Recycling Expo, Metal Recycling Expo, and ITAD & Circular Electronics Expo (collectively known as EBMI) on 17-18 June 2026 at Messe Frankfurt.
Under the Basel Convention amendments and the approaching mandate of the EU’s mandatory Digital Tracking System (DIWASS), the days of frictionless cross-border trading for untreated electronic scrap are over. The only response is to adapt. The industry is pivoting rapidly toward domestic multi-stream recovery and metal recycling. In this new landscape, hitting exchange-grade purity is the only way to protect profit margins. Advanced separation technology is no longer an upgrade; it is the absolute baseline required to handle contaminated streams and meet strict market demands. This is precisely the challenge EBMI2026 is designed to solve, providing the physical space where the industry moves from theory to real-world industrial application.
The four-pillar ecosystem
The upcoming free-to-attend Expos function as a massive, integrated hub for the urban mining spectrum. By bridging the gap between specific sectors, this four-in-one ecosystem moves the conversation from general recycling concepts to specific industrial solutions.
The primary focus lies in E-Waste and battery recycling, representing both the „inputs“ and the „future“ of the recovery supply chain. The core challenge in Frankfurt is demonstrating how operators can handle the volatility of lithium batteries and the complexity of mixed electronics to reach the next stage of processing.
This feeds directly into the strategic link for metal recycling. This section of the event represents the „output,“ proving that superior separation technology isn‘t just about managing waste. It is about high-purity metal recovery and turning scrap into highly tradeable, secondary raw materials.
Upstream from this sits the critical ITAD and circular electronics pillar. This sector acknowledges the importance of secure data destruction and circular lifecycles before these assets ever reach the recycling floor, ensuring materials are prepared for the most efficient recovery path possible.
From theory to show floor
After months of industry discussion surrounding the global scrap crisis, the focus heading into Frankfurt has officially shifted from theory to application. EBMI2026 offers a look at a select group of exhibitors currently reshaping the separation technology landscape.
Alfa Laval Technologies AB | Booth F80
To recover critical active cathode materials from hazardous battery black mass, Alfa Laval utilises high-speed disc-stack separators. This decanter centrifuge technology makes high-yield solvent extraction simple and continuous.
Andritz | Booth D55
Andritz provides mechanical and thermal separation solutions for complex recovery challenges. Their automated sorting and vacuum drying hardware successfully separate massive volumes of battery black mass and e-waste.
ERIEZ | Booth H35
Eriez manufactures heavy-duty eddy current separators and rare-earth magnetic drums. This specialised separation technology pulls high-purity ferrous and non-ferrous metals directly out of contaminated waste and complex electronic scrap.
Stokkermill | Booth J30
By exploiting electrical conductivity differences, Stokkermill’s E-Sorting series strips ultra-fine 2 mm copper granulates from plastics. Best of all, this dry, high-voltage Corona process requires zero water.
Binder & Co | Booth H45
Float light organics away from heavy mixed metals with Binder & Co. Their highly specialised liquid-jigging and controlled air-stream systems exploit specific gravity to make density-based scrap classification effortless.
