Sustainability

Responsible Catalyst Recycling for Industrial Material Streams

AG Precious Metals Group approaches sustainability through practical recycling, responsible material handling, and recovery planning for catalyst-bearing streams that contain platinum group metals.

Recycling Focus Helping catalyst-bearing materials move toward recovery instead of unmanaged disposal.
Material Control Classification, documentation, and handling support a cleaner review route.
Industrial Reality Sustainability here is practical: material flow, recovery route, and responsible next steps.
Responsible Route
Recycling
Material Collection Automotive, industrial, petrochemical, refinery, and trading sources.
Classification Material type, source, condition, quantity, and physical form.
Technical Review Sampling, assay direction, consistency, and recovery planning.
Recovery Direction Moving catalyst-bearing material toward a responsible commercial route.
Input Spent catalyst material
Output Recovery route
Real Industrial Sustainability

Sustainability starts with responsible material flow.

For catalyst recycling, sustainability is not a slogan. It is the practical work of identifying recoverable material, keeping streams controlled, and guiding them toward responsible recovery routes.

Practical Position

Responsible recycling depends on clarity before movement.

Catalyst-bearing materials can include converters, powders, pellets, granules, fines, and residues. Before they move into any recovery route, the material should be identified, documented, and reviewed.

Material classification reduces confusion around source, form, and handling needs.

Sampling and assay help support better recovery planning when material is prepared or mixed.

Responsible handling is especially important for industrial, refinery, and unknown streams.

Commercial decisions should follow a clear technical route, not guesswork.

Recovery Route

Material circularity

Spent catalyst materials are reviewed for recovery routes that keep valuable metals within industrial circulation.

Classification

Controlled material streams

Clear separation between automotive, industrial, refinery, and mixed streams supports better handling decisions.

Technical Basis

Sampling before decisions

Representative sampling and assay coordination help reduce uncertainty before recovery or settlement planning.

Responsibility

Practical environmental value

Responsible recovery helps reduce unnecessary waste by directing catalyst-bearing material toward useful processing routes.

Responsible Process

How sustainability fits into the AG process.

AG treats sustainability as part of the operating route: understand the material, keep the stream clear, evaluate properly, and guide the material toward recovery planning.

01

Material identification

We start by identifying whether the material is automotive, industrial, petrochemical, refinery-related, mixed, or unknown.

02

Stream separation

Different materials should not be treated as one generic stream when their source, form, and handling needs differ.

03

Documentation review

Photos, labels, batch notes, prior assay reports, and source details support clearer material movement.

04

Technical evaluation

Sampling and assay are used when material consistency or value cannot be understood through basic review alone.

05

Recovery planning

Once the material is understood, AG can guide the correct recovery or commercial route.

Responsible Factors

What supports responsible catalyst recycling?

The most sustainable route is usually the clearest one. Material identity, separation, documentation, and technical evaluation all reduce confusion before recovery.

01

Material classification

Converters, honeycomb, powders, pellets, granules, and residues should be identified before movement.

02

Source transparency

Automotive, industrial, petrochemical, refinery, and trading sources require different review context.

03

Batch consistency

Clear and separated batches create a better basis for technical review than mixed or unknown streams.

04

Sampling discipline

Prepared, crushed, powdered, or mixed materials may require representative sampling before decisions.

05

Documentation

Photos, source notes, labels, shipment details, and prior analysis can support responsible handling.

06

Recovery direction

Material should move toward a route that supports technical review, recovery planning, and commercial clarity.

No Empty Claims

Our sustainability message stays practical.

AG avoids vague environmental language. The focus is on what can actually be controlled in catalyst recycling: material clarity, responsible routing, technical evaluation, and recovery planning.

Responsible recycling is a process, not a tagline.

The value of catalyst recycling comes from moving material through a controlled route. That means identifying what the material is, understanding how it was generated, evaluating it properly, and guiding it toward recovery where possible.

This approach is practical for automotive recyclers, industrial operators, petrochemical businesses, refinery-related suppliers, material traders, and recovery partners.

01

Less guesswork

Clear classification reduces the chance of sending material into the wrong review route.

02

Better handling

Material form, packaging, source, and condition help define safer and more suitable handling steps.

03

More useful recovery planning

Sampling and assay information can support a more reliable recovery and settlement discussion.

04

Clearer commercial route

Sustainability also means avoiding unclear material movement and building a responsible next step.

Have catalyst-bearing material that needs a responsible route?

Start with material type, quantity, source, condition, photos, packaging, and available documents. AG will guide the material toward the correct review and recovery direction.