NEWS Chemical recycling gathers pace
Mura Technology subsidiary ReNew ELP is to begin construction of a commer- cial-scale chemical recycling plant using Mura’s Hydro- thermal Plastic Recycling Solution (HydroPRS) technology at Teesside in the UK. The project is intended to
go onstream in 2022 and will process 80,000 tonnes/ yr of plastic waste. The scheme is part-funded by the UK government, which awarded £4.42m in 2020 as part of its Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund’s Smart Sustainable Plastic Packag- ing programme. HydroPRS uses Cat-
HTR technology from Licella, which employs supercritical steam to convert plastics back to original monomers. It said to be able to recycle all forms of plastic – even multi-layer, flexible plastics used in packaging – in as little as 25 minutes. Mura said further rollout
of the technology is planned in Germany, the US and Asia. It hopes to see 1m tonnes of polymer pro- cessed using HydroPRS by 2025. Meanwhile, Netherlands-
Chemical recycling targets the most difficult-to-handle plastic waste
based recycling company Synova and Technip Energies have entered into a joint development and cooperation agreement to commercialise the former’s thermochemical plastic waste-to-olefins technology in conjunction with the latter’s steam cracking know-how. The two will work together to improve the technology, which was invented by the TNO research organisation and which Synova has further developed, tested and piloted over the past 15 years. According to Synova,
it features a clean-up train that removes 99.9% of unwanted tars and uses the energy value to create a highly efficient process with a better CO2
footprint.
Finally, in France, recy- cling firm Plastic Energy has reached agreement with ExxonMobil on a project to convert post-consumer plastic waste into raw materials for the manufac- turing of virgin-quality polymers. Under this deal, Plastic Energy will build, own and operate an advanced recycling plant adjacent to ExxonMobil’s Notre Dame de Gravenchon
petrochemical complex near Le Havre to convert waste into raw materials known as Tacoil. It is expected to be one
of the largest chemical recycling plants in Europe with an initial capacity of 25,000 tonnes/year and plans to scale up to 33,000 tonnes in the near future. A final investment decision is expected in mid-2021 with start-up anticipated in 2023. Plastic Energy already operates two commercial plants in Spain. �
www.muratechnology.com �
www.synovatech.com �
www.plasticenergy.com
Tide announces sustainability goals
P&G’s major Tide laundry detergent brand in the US has set a goal to use 100% recyclable packaging for all its products by 2030. It also aims to reduce use of virgin plastic in packaging by half (versus a 2020 baseline), through light weighting, exploring innovative packaging solutions like its Eco-Box, and increasing use of post-consumer recycled content. Currently, Tide
8 PLASTICS RECYCLING WORLD | March/April 2021
bottles use at least 25% PCR content. The packaging goals form part of Tide’s
2030 Ambition sustainability strategy. Other actions focus on improving sustainability of washing. It has set a goal for three out of four loads of laundry in the US and Canada to be washed in cold instead of hot water by 2030, which it says has the potential to reduce GHG emissions by 4.25m tonnes. �
https://us.pg.com
www.plasticsrecyclingworld.com
IMAGE: SHUTTERSTOCK
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