Bioplastic, Clean technology, Company initiatives, Investments, R&D, Recycle

Neste aims to use waste plastic feedstock for fuels and plastics

Neste says it is exploring ways to introduce liquefied waste plastic as a future raw material for fossil refining. The aim of the development project is to proceed to industrial scale trial during 2019. The company’s target is to process annually more than one million tons of waste plastic by 2030.

In Europe, some 27 million tons of post-consumer plastic waste is generated annually. Only about one-third of this amount is currently collected for recycling.

In January 2018, the European Union released its Strategy for Plastics in a Circular Economy. One of its objectives is to increase recycling of plastics and reuse of plastic packaging by 2030. In the EU Waste package, recycling target for plastic packaging was raised to 50% by 2025 and 55% by 2030.

In order to reach the ambitious EU plastics recycling targets, both chemical and mechanical recycling need to be recognized in the EU regulation, according to Neste.

Chemical recycling means using waste plastics as raw material for the refining and petrochemical industries to convert them into end products such as fuels, chemicals, and new plastics. Chemical recycling can create new outlets for plastic waste by enabling high-end product qualities, thereby complementing traditional mechanical recycling.

Reaching industrial-scale production of products from plastic waste still requires the development of technologies and value chains. To accelerate development, Neste said it is looking for partners across the value chain, for example in waste management and upgrading technologies.

In addition to exploring ways to utilize plastic waste as raw material, Neste said it is helping the plastics industry and various plastics-consuming companies to reduce their crude oil dependency and climate emissions by producing durable and recyclable renewable plastics from bio-based raw materials, such as waste fats and oils. As an example, Neste and IKEA will produce polypropylene (PP) plastic from fossil-free, bio-based raw materials at commercial scale during fall 2018. This will mark the first time in the world that bio-based PP is produced at a commercial scale.

FOLLOW ME ON THESE SPACE
0Shares

About Doris de Guzman

Doris de Guzman examines alternative processing, new technology, R&D and other sustainability initiatives aimed at preventing pollution and lowering carbon emissions through news aggregation, market data analysis and information collaboration.

Discussion

One Response to “Neste aims to use waste plastic feedstock for fuels and plastics”

  1. Great development. We need more companies willing to research on how to use waste plastics as raw materials.

    Posted by Sonia - Beta Analytic | August 28, 2018, 8:39 am

Archives

Meta