United
Kingdom-based Recycling Technologies has developed a proprietary feedstock recycling
machine for plastics.
The
RT7000 converts residual plastic scrap back into the oil it originally came
from, according to a company news release. The oil, called Plaxx, is to be used
as a petrochemical feedstock to produce new virgin-quality polymers with
recycled content.
The
RT7000 recycles low-quality plastics, including films, bags, laminates, caps and
closures and converts them into a valuable raw material within the plastics
value chain, the company says. Along with existing mechanical recycling,
Recycling Technologies aims to help keep virtually all plastics in the
circular economy with the development.
Modular
and self-contained, the feedstock recycling machine can be easily distributed to
existing waste and recycling facilities to divert plastic waste scrap from landfills and incineration, helping clients achieve recycling targets, the company
says.
Mass
manufacturing of the RT7000 enables rapid scalability of recycling capacity for film packaging in the United Kingdom, Europe and globally,
including those regions of the world most blighted by the scourge of plastics
in the environment.
In
addition, the process uses light hydrocarbon gases, which can't be condensed
to Plaxx, to enable the process to become self-sufficient.
The
company’s mission is to build 1,300 RT7000 machines in the next decade, adding
10 million metric tons of recycling capacity into the system to produce 7
million metric tons of Plaxx by 2027, the company says.
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