ACC announces winners of its 2015 Innovation in Plastics Recycling Awards

Demilec, Publix and The Recycling Partnership honored for their contributions to plastics recycling.

The American Chemistry Council (ACC), Washington, has announced that Demilec Inc., Publix and The Recycling Partnership have been selected to receive Innovation in Plastics Recycling Awards.

The awards recognize companies and nonprofits that successfully bring new technologies, products and initiatives to communities and the marketplace that demonstrate significant advancements in plastics recycling. ACC announced the awards in recognition of America Recycles Day Nov. 15.

"We are thrilled to recognize this year’s award recipients,” says Steve Russell, vice president of plastics for the ACC. “Each of these organizations is a leader in recycling innovation, and their contributions will likely inspire ongoing contributions to the rapidly growing field of plastics recycling.”

Demilec Inc., Arlington, Texas, converts polyethylene terephthalate (PET) scrap into polyols, which can be used in its spray foam insulation products. The company has recycled more than 300 million plastic bottles into spray foam insulation products in recent years and expects to recycle more than 35 million plastic bottles into high-performing spray foam insulation in 2015, ACC says. In addition to the environmental benefits of plastics recycling, spray foam insulation helps to increase energy efficiency in homes and buildings.

Lakeland, Florida-based Publix Super Markets has established itself as a leader in recycling rigid plastic packaging, such as commercial high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and polypropylene (PP) containers, ACC says. With more than 1,100 stores and nine distribution centers, Publix optimized its back-of-store recycling stream through the use of vertical and horizontal balers that produce large, dense bales of clean plastic material for recycling.

The Recycling Partnership, Falls Church, Virginia, facilitates public-private partnerships to significantly boost curbside recycling programs. Over the last 15 months, The Recycling Partnership has provided 115,000 large recycling carts and improved public education in Florence, Alabama; Columbia, South Carolina; Richmond, Virginia; and East Lansing, Michigan. Thanks to its efforts, 18,000 additional households now have access to a recycling program that collects wide-mouth plastic containers in addition to bottles, the ACC says. Cumulatively these efforts are expected to recover an additional 22 million pounds of plastics over the next 10 years.

ACC’s Innovations in Plastics Recycling Awards contest is open to all U.S. companies, nonprofits, individuals and government bodies (including schools) that collect or process plastics for recycling, promote plastics recycling through education and infrastructure, manufacture equipment used to collect or process plastics for recycling, or manufacture a new product made in whole or part from recycled plastic.