Epson Atmix has invested in plant and equipment on the construction of new factory, a sustainable metal refinery that will recycle waste metal to produce the raw material for metal powder, at Hachinohe City in Aomori, Japan.
As stated in its Environmental Vision 2050, Epson seeks to become carbon negative and underground resource free by 2050 with the aim of achieving sustainability and enriching communities.
The new Epson Atmix sustainable metal refinery is located at Hachinohe City in Aomori, in the far north of Japan's main Honshu Island.
Part of Epson's environmental strategy, outlined in the Epson '25 Renewed corporate vision, is to develop environmental technologies for recycling materials such as metal and paper and to use the resulting technologies and solutions to create new businesses.
Epson Atmix recognises that sourcing virgin materials will likely become more challenging due to underground resource scarcity and soaring metal prices. The new factory is aimed at mitigating risk by manufacturing metal powders from recycled metal resources.
As a facility for recycling metal for use in producing metal powders, the new factory will be outfitted with a high-frequency induction furnace for melting metals, an AOD refining furnace for removing impurities from metals, and a casting machine for forming ingots.
Epson Atmix will use the new factory to recycle unwanted metals from various sources, including out-of-specification metal powders in manufacturing processes at Atmix, metal scraps generated within Atmix, and metal end cuts and used moulds discarded by the Epson Group. These unwanted metals will be reused as raw materials for Atmix's metal powders. Virgin materials such as high-purity iron from blast furnaces will be replaced with recycled metal materials, conserving underground resources and reducing CO₂ emissions.
The introduction of a new refining process will better enable Epson Atmix to develop next-generation high-performance powders, improve their magnetic properties, and enhance its amorphous forming capability, thereby contributing to the realisation of a new generation of compact and energy-efficient devices.
The new factory is a step on the path to reaching Epson's goal of becoming underground resource free by 2050, as stated in the company's Environmental Vision 2050.
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