International Plastics News for Asia

Profitable recycling operations

K 2013 is fast approaching and a series of reports  are available online to those who would like to get information about the show and the wide range of products that will be exhibited. This year, K will have as many as 3,000 exhibitors, and these exhibitors view the show as an ideal platform to launch new technologies and materials for the global plastics and rubber market. 

One of the topics that will definitely take its special place in this major exhibition is recycling. Europe has been in the forefront of innovations in recycling, with many big players in the region having launched their technologies for efficient, and profitable, recycling of plastics.

Throughout the 1960s to the 1980s, the plastics industry gave little thought to sensible ways of disposing of or recovering waste plastics. The issue, however, had shifted into the spotlight by 1991 at the latest when the German Packaging Ordinance came into effect. Taking the lead at that time, Germany was the first country to set up rules for the recovery of plastics waste and establish them on the market.  

After Germany, many other countries in Europe have addressed the issue and developed highly successful strategies for collection and recovery. According to surveys, about 47 million tonnes of plastics were consumed in the 27 countries of the European Union, including Switzerland and Norway in 2011, of which 40 percent are for non-durable and 60 percent for durable applications. In the same year, some 25 million tonnes of waste plastics were collected, 40 percent going to landfill and 60 percent being recovered. 

The waste from collection systems for used packages accounted for over 60 percent of this, followed by products from the construction, automotive and electronics sectors. Exemplary collections systems are in place in nine European countries: Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands and Luxemburg (listed in descending order) with collection rates ranging from 99 to 92 percent. At the same time, six of these countries have the highest recycling rates in Europe. Norway, Sweden, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and Austria with rates of 35 to 26 percent head the field by a clear margin. The remaining collected wastes are recovered to generate energy by incineration. 

PET bottles are also amenable to single-grade sorted-waste collection and processing. The spectrum of products made from them range from fibres and films to new bottles. A large variety of suppliers like the Austrian companies Starlinger & Co. GmbH in Vienna, NGR GmbH in Feldkirchen and Erema GmbH in Ansfelden have developed special recycling lines for PET. Gneuss Kunststofftechnik GmbH in Bad Oeynhausen is successful in the marketplace with its MRS extruder, for which an FDA approval has even been obtained.

Many more other companies are expected to develop their own recycling systems that will provide not only the efficiency needed in properly disposing and re-using plastics, but also present high profitable prospects for recyclers. 


Related Links:
For an update on the exhibitors and products that will be exhibited at K 2013, visit:  http://us.industrysourcing.com/en/industry/plastics-rubber.aspx