There are no shortages of minerals to make the batteries. Lithium is the most common metal on earth. Not all cobalt comes from the Congo and the amount used in the batteries is reducing every year. The current battery shortage is not being caused by the lack of raw materials, but by the shortage of factories to make batteries and form them into the packs needed by the car manufacturers.
When the lithium battery in a car reaches the end of its life - which is typically when it's storage capacity has dropped to around 70% of it's original value, the pack can be removed and used as energy storage at a renewable energy source such as a wind turbine, so that power can continue to be supplied when there is no wind (and be charged up when there is wind)
By the time large numbers of lithium ion batteries from vehicles eventually need to be recycled, there will no doubt be many more facilities to do that.
The mere fact that they can be recycled is a positive - you can't recycle burned petrol or diesel!!!
As to the power demand on the grid from electric vehicles being charged - that's another myth. The vast majority of electric vehicles are charged overnight, at a slow rate and at a time when there is plenty spare generating capacity.
Cheers
Bruce
Parts of this are certainly not right. Lithium is not the most common metal on earth, aluminium is. There are 23 metals more common on earth - including some members of the group known as rare earth metals. Lithium is not especially abundant, and the total quantity of lithium reserves is assumed to be sufficient for the automotive sectors needs in the condition that the number of cars required is less than the number currently existing and that they have small batteries. Such estimates also do not appear to include the requirements to replace other internal combustion engines - e.g. trucks, trains, farm machinery etc. Battery technology may well change, but scepticism about the capacity of current technology to meet needs is not entirely groundless. Ultimately, batteries are not a good way to run a car. They replace 50kg of fuel weight with hundreds of kilos of battery with less energy capacity.
While it's good that batteries can be re-used or recycled, that's not really the important issue to consumers. The key problem is that at some point during the life of the cars, we assume they may well need replacement. Manufacturers are uniformly evasive about battery life and the cost of replacements. Until they start to tell the truth and are seen to do so, most people won't touch them with a bargepole, for fear of being hit with an astronomic battery bill.
As to the demand on the electricity grid, I have my doubts about that too. The vast majority of electric vehicles are charged overnight, because it takes all night. That vast majority is a tiny number. Very, very few electric vehicles exist in the UK. Of the plug-in hybrid variety, recent research showed that the large majority have NEVER been plugged in. If and when electric vehicles become mainstream, it is obvious that the current barriers to acceptance will have been over come: i.e. that they won't take anything like as long to charge, batteries will be far larger, and people will have much wider access to fast chargers running at much higher currents. It is obvious that this will involve far higher demands on the grid. To charge 10 million cars at the same time using even relatively low power chargers implies the need for the grid's capacity to increase dramatically . There are 30-odd million cars, half a million goods vehicles and many more other industrial vehicles. To extrapolate on the characteristics of current models seems like wishful thinking. In some cases independent testing has shown the real power consumption of EVs to be over twice the reported levels on which these estimates are based. At that level, electric vehicles would use getting on for half the current total electricity production of the UK at current levels of traffic. In the end, it doesn't really matter if we need more power stations.
What does matter is if we allow the adoption of this technology to happen in a sphere where policymakers and providers of infrastructure are guided by delusional and deliberately misleading data into a fantasy world where electric cars magically get us around in defiance of the laws of physics and of common sense. The consequences will be a transport system not fit for purpose which will severely damage everybody's quality of life.
I shall be delighted to get an electric car at the first moment that it is sensible and realistic to do so. I don't anticipate that being in the next five years under any imaginable set of circumstances.