Qenos, Cleanaway join forces in plastic-to-plastic recycling study

plastic recycling

Plastics manufacturer Qenos and leading waste management company, Cleanaway have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to undertake a joint feasibility study for plastic-to-plastic advanced recycling in New South Wales and Victoria.

The study will investigate the feasibility and environmental benefits of converting up to 100,000 tonnes per year of Australia’s household soft plastic waste and mixed plastics, which would otherwise end up in landfill, into feedstock for use in Qenos’ existing manufacturing facilities to produce Circular Polyethylene.

Circular Polyethylene has identical properties to virgin polyethylene and can be used in food contact and high performance applications, thereby supporting local packaging and food manufacturers to achieve the 2025 APCO National Packaging Targets.

Stephen Bell, Qenos Chief Executive Officer, said that the joint study leverages the combined resources of the nation’s leading companies in the fields of plastics waste management and plastics manufacturing.

“Qenos is uniquely positioned to help solve our country’s soft plastics waste problem as the only operator in Australia with the complete suite of assets required for the creation of circular plastics through advanced recycling. Without polymer manufacturing, advanced recycling stops at plastics-to-oil,” he said.

Qenos will lead the study for one or more advanced recycling plants using its existing steam cracker and polymerisation facilities that would convert plastic waste pre-processed by Cleanaway.

Cleanaway will leverage its existing collection and processing infrastructure and investigate new methods of collecting, sorting and pre-processing post-consumer soft plastics to provide the required volumes of suitable feedstock for advanced recycling.

Mark Schubert, Cleanaway Chief Executive Officer said: “Through our already established Circular Plastics Australia partnership we are well progressed in developing the leading mechanical plastics reprocessing platform for PET (Polyethylene terephthalate), HDPE (High-density polyethylene) and PP (Polypropylene) and potentially LDPE (Low-density polyethylene).

“We are pleased to now partner with Qenos to study advanced recycling, which would complement our existing reprocessing platform to process mixed plastics that cannot be mechanically recycled. It would enable us to offer our customers higher resource recovery rates and more sustainable, circular outcomes for their waste.”

Cleanaway is one of Qenos’ partners in a bid submitted for the Modern Manufacturing Initiative (MMI) Collaboration Stream to support the plastic-to-plastic advanced recycling project. Incorporating 50 consortium partners and supporters across the entire supply chain from raw material production to supermarket shelf, Federal Government assistance would see a new sovereign manufacturing sector secured in Australia.

“This project will be a huge step towards a plastics circular economy in Australia and achieving the National Packaging Targets from local inputs,” Bell said. “Qenos and Cleanaway are playing a leadership role in seeking to ensure Australian manufacturing fully participates in a new global industry that is forecast to attract $680 billion in investment by 2050.”

The joint feasibility study is expected to be completed by July 2022 and a final investment decision to be made later this year. Pending a successful outcome, the first of the advanced recycling facilities is expected to be operational by 2025.

For more information, visit: www.cleanaway.com.au

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