KES 4,895 billion [5.5 billion yen], Atmix facility delivers closed-loop production while cutting CO₂ and virgin-metal use
Epson Atmix Corporation, a group company of Seiko Epson Corporation has begun full operations at a new metal-recycling plant in Hachinohe, Japan.
Built at a cost of approximately KES 4,895 billion [¥5.5 billion]. The Kita-Inter Plant No. 2 will turn scrap metal from Epson factories and local communities into high-quality powders for metal injection moulding and other advanced manufacturing processes. The facility runs on renewable electricity and incorporates automated material-handling systems to boost efficiency and safety.
“Sustainability is no longer a distant goal. It is a business imperative for Africa as much as for the rest of the world. By closing the loop on metal use. Epson is proving that resource efficiency and industrial growth can and must go hand in hand. The lessons we learn in Japan will help us and our partners across East and West Africa build greener, more resilient supply chains.” Says Mukesh Bector, Regional Head – East & West Africa, Epson
The new plant supports Epson’s Environmental Vision 2050. This vision targets carbon-negative operations and the elimination of exhaustible underground resources by mid-century. By replacing virgin blast-furnace iron with recycled feedstock. Epson expects significant reductions in CO₂ emissions while securing a stable supply of metal powders for next-generation, energy-efficient devices.
Key features of the plant
Labor-saving automation – Automated raw material input, slag removal robots, and automated temperature measurement and sampling
Use of renewable energy – Utilization of renewable electricity and LNG