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High Purity Electrolytic Manganese Dioxide: The Quiet Powerhouse of the Battery Revolution

Core Consultants recently completed a feasibility study assessing the potential to establish a high-purity manganese processing plant in South Africa. The country is endowed with vast manganese resources, including significant above-ground stockpiles of unused fines that could serve as a viable feed source. Should this project advance, it could deliver wide-ranging benefits: creating a new beneficiation pathway, establishing a value-added industry in a strategically important global market, and unlocking economic value from resources that have remained untapped for decades. What follows is a summary of our findings.

Introduction: Why HP-EMD Matters

While lithium, cobalt, and nickel dominate the headlines in battery materials, High Purity Electrolytic Manganese Dioxide (HP-EMD) is quietly emerging as one of the most strategic minerals of the clean energy transition. HP-EMD is not glamorous, but it is essential. It forms the cathode material in alkaline batteries, primary lithium batteries, and increasingly, lithium-ion formulations used in electric vehicles (EVs) and energy storage.

A recent market study projects that the HP-EMD market will double in value from $1.5 billion in the early 2020s to nearly $5 billion by 2030, driven by consumer demand for portable power, the electrification of transport, and the global pivot to clean energy.

This post unpacks the key findings of the report — supply, demand, recycling, pricing, and the challenges that define the HP-EMD industry.

The Supply Side: A Concentrated Market

Production of HP-EMD is highly concentrated. Over 60% of global output comes from China, with major players like Xiangtan Electrochemical and CITIC Dameng. Japan’s Tosoh Corporation, the U.S. firm Borman Specialty Materials, and India’s state-owned MOIL Ltd. provide additional but smaller volumes.

  • Global production rose from 320,000 tonnes in 2020 to over 415,000 tonnes by 2024.
  • China remains the anchor, but projects in Europe (Euro Manganese’s Chvaletice project in the Czech Republic) and Canada’s Woodstock initiative show a clear trend: supply chain diversification.
  • Still, HP-EMD production is capital-intensive, requiring $50–100 million for a new facility and 2–3 years to commission. This limits new entrants.

The result is a market where a few well-capitalized producers dominate, and regional players struggle to scale.

Demand Dynamics: Alkaline Batteries to EVs

Alkaline batteries remain the single largest consumer of HP-EMD — think of the 15+ billion AA and AAA batteries sold worldwide each year. Each AA cell contains 6–8 grams of EMD, translating into over 100,000 tonnes annually.

But the real growth story lies elsewhere:

  • Lithium Manganese Oxide (LMO) batteries, derived from HP-EMD, are seeing rapid uptake in electric scooters, e-bikes, and entry-level EVs.
  • The global two-wheeler EV market is forecast to grow at 28% CAGR through 2030, driving HP-EMD demand from 30,000 tonnes in 2025 to more than 80,000 tonnes by 2035.
  • Primary lithium batteries (like CR coin cells for electronics) remain a smaller but lucrative niche, requiring ultra-pure HP-EMD grades.

In short, alkaline batteries keep the market stable, but lithium-ion and mobility applications are the growth engine.

Recycling: A Coming Disruptor

One of the most important themes in the report is the rise of battery recycling.

  • By 2030, between 11–19% of Europe’s manganese demand for batteries could be met by recycled materials.
  • By 2040, as much as 30% of global demand could be filled through recycling streams.

Advanced hydrometallurgical processes now recover HP-EMD from spent batteries at >90% purity. Companies like Redwood Materials in the U.S. are already partnering with battery manufacturers to close the loop.

But challenges remain:

  • Recycling costs are 10–15% higher than primary production.
  • Collection rates in emerging economies remain below 60%, limiting feedstock.

Still, recycling is poised to be a game-changer, particularly in the EU and China, where strict Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) laws enforce circularity.

Pricing and Trade

Unlike bulk commodities, HP-EMD is not traded on exchanges. It is sold through long-term contracts between producers and major battery manufacturers such as Duracell, Energizer, and Panasonic.

  • As of mid-2025, prices ranged between $1,800 and $2,100 per tonne, depending on grade.
  • Alkaline battery grade fetches the highest premium due to stringent purity requirements.
  • LMO-grade EMD prices have softened slightly in recent years as competition from alternative cathodes (like NMC and LFP) intensifies.

Because cathode chemistry is highly sensitive to feedstock, once a manufacturer qualifies a supplier, they rarely switch. This creates a sticky demand relationship and explains why EMD prices remain relatively resilient despite market shifts.

Regional Perspectives

  • China: Dominant in both production and consumption, feeding its vast EV and consumer electronics markets.
  • Europe: Building strategic independence via the Chvaletice project and strict recycling mandates under the EU Critical Raw Materials Act.
  • North America: Focused on localization to support domestic EV manufacturing, with projects like Canada’s Woodstock plant targeting long-term supply.
  • India: Emerging, with MOIL Ltd. gradually improving purity standards to align with EV battery requirements.
  • Asia ex-China: Rapid growth in alkaline and two-wheeler demand, particularly in India and Southeast Asia.

Challenges Ahead

Despite optimism, the HP-EMD market faces structural hurdles:

  1. Capital Intensity – Few companies can shoulder the $100m+ required to scale production.
  2. Environmental Pressures – HP-EMD production is energy-intensive and heavily scrutinized for its water and waste footprint.
  3. Substitution Risks – New chemistries like LFP (lithium iron phosphate) are growing rapidly, particularly in EVs, potentially capping HP-EMD’s share.
  4. Geopolitics – With China controlling most of the value chain, Western governments view HP-EMD as a strategic vulnerability.

Strategic Outlook

The report concludes that global HP-EMD demand will continue to rise at 6–8% CAGR, closely tracking the growth of EVs and portable energy. By 2035, demand could exceed 470,000 tonnes, with Europe and North America capturing a larger share of supply growth.

Investors and policymakers should focus on:

  • Recycling ventures that can deliver high-purity, cost-competitive HP-EMD.
  • Regional projects like Euro Manganese’s Chvaletice facility that reduce reliance on China.
  • Technology improvements in cathode design that increase manganese intensity, such as high-manganese NMC or LNMO.

Key Takeaways

  • HP-EMD is the unsung hero of the battery sector, anchoring both legacy alkaline batteries and emerging EV chemistries.
  • Supply is highly concentrated in China, but new projects in Europe and North America are slowly diversifying risk.
  • Recycling is set to reshape the industry, potentially supplying 30% of demand by 2040.
  • Prices remain resilient due to sticky supplier relationships and high purity requirements.
  • The next decade will define whether HP-EMD becomes a bottleneck or a competitive advantage in the global energy transition.

author avatar
Lara Smith
Lara is the CEO and founder of Core Consultants. She has been an analyst for over thirteen years and has focused on commodity markets for just over a decade. She began her career as a buy-side analyst at Foord Asset Management in Cape Town, before taking a Head of Research role at a mining corporate finance and investment firm.

This is a paid for advertorial by the company and written independently by Core Consultants PTY LTD. This is not considered to be investment advice.

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