
A report released by the American Chemistry Council (ACC), Washington, finds the potential economic impact of expanding advanced plastic recycling and recovery technologies in the United States to be nearly $10 billion.
According to the report, if advanced plastics recycling and recovery facilities in the U.S. were widely adopted, the processes could result in 40,000 U.S. jobs, as much as $2.2 billion in annual payroll and $9.9 billion in economic output.
“Advanced plastic recycling and recovery technologies have the potential to revolutionize the way we make, use, and reuse our plastic resources,” states Steve Russell, ACC vice president of plastics. “These technologies further demonstrate the untapped value of used plastics and have the potential to dramatically accelerate our transition to a circular economy.”
Prepared by ACC’s economics and statistics department, the report updates a similar analysis completed in 2014. The earlier analysis only examined the economic potential associated with converting used plastics into synthetic crude oil. Since then, technologies have “significantly” expanded their range of outputs to meet
The latest report examines a class of advanced plastic recycling and recovery technologies known as chemical recycling, which includes pyrolysis and depolymerization. These advanced technologies complement traditional recycling, also known as “mechanical recycling,” and could help society recover and repurpose a much broader range of
“Expanding advanced plastic recycling and recovery facilities could create thousands of U.S. jobs, result in billions of dollars in economic output and eliminate the landfilling of 6.5 million tons of post-use recoverable plastics each year,” says Priyanka Bakaya, founder and CEO of
Several major plastics makers and energy companies have recently announced investments and or agreements with advanced plastic recycling and recovery technology providers, which are helping to demonstrate and scale these processes.
Last May, plastics makers in the United States, Canada
“Plastic packaging and consumer products weigh less than alternatives, helping to reduce transportation fuel use, greenhouse gas emissions and waste,” Russell says. “Learning to treat used plastics as a resource has both economic and environmental benefits. Converting more of these materials to valuable products and raw materials will help keep plastic waste out of the environment and in productive use.”
Sponsored Content
Shredding tough materials with a small footprint
Discover how SSI’s innovative M120 EX Dual-Shear® shredder is revolutionizing recycling with its unique stacked chamber design and SmartFeed® technology—delivering powerful, space-efficient, and adaptive shredding for hard-to-process materials like plastics, metals, and fishing nets. Watch the video and read the full article to see this next-generation shredder in real-world operations.
Sponsored Content
Shredding tough materials with a small footprint
Discover how SSI’s innovative M120 EX Dual-Shear® shredder is revolutionizing recycling with its unique stacked chamber design and SmartFeed® technology—delivering powerful, space-efficient, and adaptive shredding for hard-to-process materials like plastics, metals, and fishing nets. Watch the video and read the full article to see this next-generation shredder in real-world operations.
Sponsored Content
Shredding tough materials with a small footprint
Discover how SSI’s innovative M120 EX Dual-Shear® shredder is revolutionizing recycling with its unique stacked chamber design and SmartFeed® technology—delivering powerful, space-efficient, and adaptive shredding for hard-to-process materials like plastics, metals, and fishing nets. Watch the video and read the full article to see this next-generation shredder in real-world operations.
Sponsored Content
Shredding tough materials with a small footprint
Discover how SSI’s innovative M120 EX Dual-Shear® shredder is revolutionizing recycling with its unique stacked chamber design and SmartFeed® technology—delivering powerful, space-efficient, and adaptive shredding for hard-to-process materials like plastics, metals, and fishing nets. Watch the video and read the full article to see this next-generation shredder in real-world operations.
Get curated news on YOUR industry.
Enter your email to receive our newsletters.
Latest from Recycling Today
- Advocacy groups question ‘green’ label for coal in steel production
- McKinsey predicts ongoing demand for recycled-content metals
- Fleetio launches Advanced Analytics to help fleets turn data into action
- Rice Lake SURVIVOR® Truck Scale Advantages
- Why use weigh in motion truck scales with the SURVIVOR OTR-IMS system
- New in-motion truck scale system from Rice Lake Weighing Systems
- Case adds new CX380E crawler unit to its large excavator lineup
- Impact Air Systems launches a next-gen material drum separator