BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) Battery Recycling & Second-Life Value (2026)
Last updated: 4 May 2026
BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) battery: recycling and second-life options
Reviewed by the eCycling Central editorial team on May 2026
The BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) (BMW, 2022-) carries a 101.7 kWh battery pack using NMC 811 chemistry from cell supplier CATL. The pack weighs 640 kg. End-of-life routes split between second-life applications (typically 5-10 more years of grid storage) and full material recycling.
Battery specifications
| Field | Value | |---|---| | Capacity (gross) | 101.7 kWh | | Chemistry | NMC 811 | | Cell supplier | CATL | | Pack weight | 640 kg | | Manufacturer | BMW | | Production years | 2022- |
Recoverable materials
A typical BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) pack contains:
- Lithium: 12 kg (carbonate-equivalent ~64 kg)
- Cobalt: 7 kg
- Nickel: 95 kg
- Copper: ~25-50 kg in busbars and current collectors
- Aluminium: ~30-60 kg in cell housings and pack structure
- Steel: pack enclosure
- Graphite: anode material
- Manganese: present in NMC chemistry packs
Second-life value
A BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) pack typically retains 70-80% capacity at the end of its first automotive life (~8-15 years). At that point it has 5-10 more useful years in lower-cycle applications:
- Grid stabilisation — fleet partnerships (B2U Storage Solutions, Connected Energy)
- Solar self-consumption storage — residential battery walls (some offerings repackage former EV cells)
- Off-grid power — marine, RV, off-grid cabin
- EV charging buffer — used at fast-charge sites to reduce peak grid draw
Typical second-life market value: $7000-13500 USD
Where to sell second-life packs:
- B2U Storage Solutions
- Connected Energy (UK)
- Powervault (UK residential)
- Re-Volv
- Direct sale to integrators via specialist brokers
Full recycling value
If second-life isn't viable (cell damage, capacity below 60%, no buyer), full material recycling routes:
- Recovery value: $1400-2400 USD
- Recycling cost: $0-500 USD
- Net economics: Generally net-positive — manufacturer often sees a credit when delivering NMC/NCA packs
Major battery recyclers operating in BMW's key markets:
- Li-Cycle (US, Canada, Europe) — hub-and-spoke model
- Redwood Materials (US) — integrated cell-to-cell recycling, supplies recovered cathode material back to major OEMs
- Umicore (Belgium, global) — integrated smelter
- Ecobat — lead-acid + lithium-ion
- BMW closed-loop programme (where available — see take-back URL below)
Manufacturer take-back
BMW sustainability + battery recycling
In the EU, manufacturers are obligated under EU Battery Regulation 2023/1542 (effective 2024) to provide free take-back for EV batteries. In the US, state-level laws vary — California's SB 615 (effective 2026) requires similar manufacturer responsibility.
Compliance and safety
EV batteries are classified as UN3480 / UN3481 (lithium-ion battery) under hazardous-materials transport regulations. Movement requires:
- Class 9 hazmat-certified transporter
- Damaged-pack protocol (typically requires container with non-conductive padding)
- Documentation: Bill of Lading + UN packaging certificate
Cannot be transported on a regular vehicle without certified packaging.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
By 2030, the IEA projects 1.4 million tonnes of EV battery waste annually globally. The BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) contributes to this stream when retired. With 12 kg of lithium per pack, recovering even a fraction returns critical minerals to the supply chain — recovered lithium typically costs 30-50% less in carbon footprint than freshly mined material (NREL ReCell Center data).
Related guides
- Live Global E-Waste Counter — see e-waste accumulating in real-time
- Manufacturer Sustainability Scorecard — how BMW ranks on take-back, repairability, and Right to Repair
- Right to Repair Legislation Tracker
Sources
- BMW battery sustainability disclosure
- US DOE National Renewable Energy Laboratory ReCell Center
- IEA Global EV Outlook 2024
- EU Battery Regulation 2023/1542
- Cell supplier (CATL) published specifications
- LME spot prices for cobalt, nickel, lithium carbonate
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is a used BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) battery worth?
Second-life market value (for grid storage, residential battery wall, off-grid use) typically $7000-13500 USD. Full recycling material value $1400-2400 USD. Almost always more economic to extend useful life via second-life rather than scrap immediately.
What chemistry is the BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) battery?
NMC 811, supplied by CATL. The pack weighs 640 kg and stores 101.7 kWh of energy.
How is the BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) battery recycled?
Major recyclers (Li-Cycle, Redwood Materials, Umicore) dismantle the 640 kg pack, test cells for second-life eligibility (70%+ capacity), then non-viable cells go through hydrometallurgical or pyrometallurgical processing to recover lithium (12 kg), cobalt (7 kg), nickel (95 kg), copper, and aluminium.
Does BMW take back the BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) battery?
Yes. See [BMW take-back programme](https://www.bmwgroup.com/en/sustainability.html). Under EU Battery Regulation 2023/1542 (effective 2024), all EU sales include free manufacturer take-back at end-of-life. US take-back is currently voluntary with state-level requirements emerging (California SB 615 effective 2026).
Can I transport an EV battery myself?
No. The BMW i7 xDrive60 (101.7 kWh) battery is UN3480/UN3481 hazmat-classified. Movement requires a Class 9 certified transporter with proper packaging and Bill of Lading. Damaged packs have additional protocol. Cannot be moved on a regular vehicle.