Stellantis is proving that an electric vehicle battery’s life doesn’t end when the car does. Through its circular economy arm, SUSTAINera, the automaker is repurposing high-voltage packs for “second-life” duty—and one of the most compelling examples yet isn’t powering a car, but helping people move in an entirely different way.
Meet AVATHOR ONE, an electric mobility device designed for wheelchair users and people with reduced mobility. Instead of relying on freshly built batteries, AVATHOR ONE runs on modules reclaimed from Stellantis EVs. The packs are collected in Turin, tested, and re-engineered by INTENT S.r.l., a local system integrator. The result: compact 1.4- or 2.8-kWh units that drive the device’s electric heart, backed by a modern battery management system.
Think of it as recycling meets inclusivity. “A second life for batteries, a new freedom of mobility for people,” is more than a slogan here—it’s a practical example of how automakers can merge sustainability and social responsibility without compromising technology.
The project is a local ecosystem done right. Stellantis supplies the used EV batteries. INTENT breaks down, repacks, and reintegrates them. Avathor, a Turin-based startup, builds the device itself, while legendary design house Italdesign shapes the product from its 2019 concept (the WheeM-i) into the market-ready AVATHOR ONE. The collaboration officially launched in April and has already been showcased globally—first at Expo 2025 Osaka, and next at the upcoming Salone Auto Torino.
And AVATHOR ONE isn’t just a feel-good story. It’s part of a much bigger Stellantis strategy to wring maximum value out of its EV batteries. Beyond mobility aids, SUSTAINera has partnered with utilities and battery integrators on large-scale energy storage, including ENEL X’s PIONEER project at Rome Fiumicino Airport. That installation—the largest of its kind in Italy—stores renewable energy, cuts CO₂ emissions by an estimated 16,000 tons over a decade, and shows that repurposed car batteries can scale well beyond niche applications.
The goal is nothing less than a 360-degree approach to EV battery life: Reuse, Repurpose, Remanufacture, and Recycle. In other words, keep these high-voltage packs working as long as possible before they hit the shredder.
For Stellantis, that strategy is both a business model and a statement. The company has seen “second-life” battery demand surge over the last three years, and it’s investing heavily to keep the momentum. If AVATHOR ONE is any indication, the payoff won’t just be measured in carbon savings—but in freedom of movement for people who need it most.
Source: Stellantis