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NEWS


Exxon goes cold on European chemical recycling projects


ExxonMobil is pausing plans to build two chemical recycling projects for plastics waste in Europe, according to a report by Reuters. The US energy and chemicals group has a €100m investment planned for two projects for chemical recycling at its petrochemical facilities in Rotter- dam, Netherlands, and Antwerp, Belgium, which would process 80,000 tonnes/yr of plastic waste. However, in an interview with


Reuters, Senior Vice President Jack Williams said the two projects had now been paused because of the European Commission’s proposed allocation method for the mass balance approach to be used in chemical recycling operations. The Commission has started a consultation on the Fuel-Use Excluded method it prefers for calculating output that can be claimed as “recycled” from a plant using plastics waste input (Com- pounding World July 2025). Williams said this puts integrated petrochemi- cal facilities at a disadvantage to standalone chemical recycling facilities. “Everything else is on track. We’ve had local support,” he said in the


ExxonMobil facility in Baytown, Texas, US, where the group has two recycling units


Reuters report. “We want to make these investments... The only thing standing between us and doing this project is EU policy.” In the same Reuters interview, Williams said that although US import tariffs were not a significant problem for the company, EU regulation was. He specifically urged the EU to repeal the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive that requires larger companies to check if their supply chains use forced labour or cause environmental damage. The application of the directive has been postponed until July 2027 to give EU


member states more time to pass implementing laws. In the US, ExxonMobil has been


expanding its chemical recycling operations. In June, it said a second recycling unit at its facility in Baytown, Texas, would double the capacity there after processing more than 100m lb of plastic waste since start-up in late 2022. The group also plans a third and fourth Baytown unit and the first unit at its facility in Beaumont, Texas which would increase overall processing capacity to approximately 500m lb/yr of plastic waste. � https://corporate.exxonmobil.com


Bio-Fed launches new PCR product line


M·Cyclose rABS in a light grey with 96% PCR content based on regrinds from white goods


IMAGE: BIO-FED 6 PLASTICS RECYCLING WORLD | October 2025


Bio-Fed, a branch of Akro-Plastic which has developed various customised recycling compounds tailored to meet customer requirements, is launching M·Cyclose, a new ready-to-use product line containing a varying amount of PCR material. The M·Cyclose UBQ product range provides more sustainable solutions for a wide range of non-food injection moulding applica- tions, the specific sustainability aspect lying in the combination of various matrix polymers and a filler material made from recycled household waste. The company says these compounds significantly contribute to conserving resources and reducing the carbon footprint of components, and also exhibit good processability. The M·Cyclose portfolio also includes various PCR-recycled compounds based on rABS, rPP, rPMMA, rPBT, or rPET. � https://bio-fed.com/en


www.plasticsrecyclingworld.com


IMAGE: EXXONMOBIL


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