NEW TECHNIQUE TURNS PLASTIC WASTE BACK INTO REFINERY-QUALITY OIL
IS THIS A SOLUTION TO OUR GROWING PLASTIC WASTE PROBLEM?
ETTY / FUTURISM
Chemicals and aircraft parts manufacturer Honeywell International announced this week that it’s come up with a new way to turn low-grade plastic waste into oil that’s high enough quality to be fed into a refinery.
The
company is now partnering with Spanish infrastructure company Sacyr SA
to scale up its process, dubbed the Upcycle Process Technology, in a
facility capable of turning 30,000 metric tons of mixed plastic trash
into oil per year. Production is set to begin in 2023.
As
global supplies of plastic waste keep piling up, industry players are
looking at ways to make recycling viable and profitable enough to
alleviate the environmental scourge. While we have yet to see if the
process can actually make a dent on an industrial scale, let alone the
costs involved, it’s a valiant effort and a potential solution to a growing problem.
Honeywell
is building on decades of experience when it comes to purifying plastic
waste, and claims its process “has the potential to increase the amount
of global plastic waste that can be recycled to 90 percent,” according
to a press release.
That’s a big jump, considering that only about two percent of plastic waste is currently turned back into reusable materials, according to Bloomberg. Roughly half is either incinerated or dumped in landfills, and a shocking 30 percent lands in the ocean or other waterways.
Our
reliance on plastic materials isn’t going to go away any time soon.
“Plastics play an important role in our society, including expanding the
shelf life of food and making vehicles lighter, which reduces their
emissions,” Vimal Kapur, CEO of Honeywell performance materials and
technologies, said in the release. “Unfortunately, only a fraction of
plastics today can be successfully recycled.”
“By
broadening the types of plastic that can be recycled, UpCycle will
revolutionize the plastics economy and play a critical role in improving
the sustainability of many of the products we use on a daily basis,” he
added.
As
always, the proof is in the pudding. Whether Honeywell holds the key to
ending our enormous plastic waste problem remains to be seen — but the
issue is certainly ripe for disruption one way or another.