IIT Madras develops indigenous pilot plant to process 100 tonnes of eWaste per year
IIT Madras develops a zero discharge pilot plant at BHEL Tiruchirapalli to process 100 tonnes of PCB e-waste annually, recovering metals and supporting Make in India and circular economy

The pilot plant facility is designed to treat 100 tonnes per annum of PCB and is located at Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited (BHEL) in Tiruchirapalli, an IIT Madras release here on Sunday said.
From lab-scale chemistry to a functional unit, this innovation demonstrates a zero-discharge, single-acid process to recover metals from electronic waste, offering a scalable blueprint.
At a time when India is generating nearly five million metric tonnes of electronic waste annually, IIT Madras researchers have built and demonstrated a scalable, zero-discharge pilot plant that can recover valuable metals from discarded electronics—without polluting soil, water, or air.
The technology behind this pilot project was the outcome of an exploratory research project funded internally by IIT Madras.
Elaborating, Professor S Pushpavanam, YBG Varma Chair Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, IIT Madras, said, ”With India’s e-waste challenge accelerating, this pilot plant offers a ready-to-scale model for clean metal recovery. The work aligns with Make in India, the circular economy, and critical minerals security. It also provides a rare example of academic research translating into technology development.” He said the unique aspects of this pilot plant, in comparison to existing technologies, include use of a single acid, enabling a zero discharge process, made completely by Indian firms based on research in IIT Madras and automated operations with high levels of safety integrated in the design.
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