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So Thieves Nabbed Your Catalytic Converter. Here’s Where It Ended Up. - The New York Times

The pollution control devices contain valuable metals, making them a hot commodity for recycling. Some beneficiaries of the thefts look the other way.

The innards of a catalytic converter are coated in some of the rarest, most expensive metals on the planet. Credit... Janie Osborne for The New York Times What Does Catalytic Converter Look Like

So Thieves Nabbed Your Catalytic Converter. Here’s Where It Ended Up. - The New York Times

By Walt Bogdanich,  Isak Hüllert and Eli Tan

Walt Bogdanich reported from Columbus, Mont.; Nassau County, N.Y.; and Orlando, Fla. Isak Hüllert and Eli Tan interviewed officials from three continents with ties to the catalytic converter industry.

One morning in September, a truck disgorged its load of pulverized rock with a resounding bang inside Stillwater Mining’s metallurgical plant north of Yellowstone National Park.

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The mined ore contains platinum, palladium and rhodium, three of the earth’s rarest, most expensive metals — and vital components in the millions of catalytic converters that reduce polluting emissions from gasoline-powered vehicles.

At the opposite end of the plant was another batch of metal, not from the mine but from used catalytic converters ground into powder for recycling. The new and the old metals would later be blended under intense heat, then shipped to a refinery.

and sold to auto suppliers,

The metals come from mines

and sold to auto suppliers,

from vehicles and sold to recyclers

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So Thieves Nabbed Your Catalytic Converter. Here’s Where It Ended Up. - The New York Times

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