New Study Describes Benefits and Types of Waste Plastics-to-Fuels Technologies

Date: May 6, 2011

Source: American Chemistry Council

The American Chemistry Council has released a study it commissioned that examines various approaches to converting waste plastics into fuels while touting its two-fold benefit: transforming non-recycled plastic into a valuable commodity, and creating a reliable source for alternative energy from an abundant, no-cost feedstock. The study, entitled "Conversion technology: A complement to plastic recycling" and conducted by 4R Sustainability, Inc., argues that employing these technologies could greatly expand US plastics recycling while providing a cost-effective source of alternative energy. The information presented is intended to help inform government officials, plastics reclaimers, materials recovery facility managers, and investors about the range of available technologies and under what conditions each could fit in commercial or community waste management plans.


PRESS RELEASE
May 6, 2011

New Study - Growing Opportunities for Non-Recycled Plastics as Abundant Alternative Energy Source

Today the American Chemistry Council released a study conducted by 4R Sustainability, Inc. on increasing opportunities for plastics-to-fuel "conversion technologies" in the Unites States. Although in the United States plastics are made primarily from natural gas, these innovative technologies are effectively turning non-recycled plastics into crude oil and other fuels, helping to create a reliable source of alternative energy from an abundant, no-cost feedstock, and diverting this potentially valuable material from landfills. Many of these technologies are already being implemented on a commercial scale in Europe and Asia.

In 2009, the United States recycled over 4 billion pounds of plastics. This report demonstrates that we have an ability to recycle and recover more plastics through innovative technologies including those that allow us to convert plastics into oil and other fuels.

"As the United States seeks cost-effective sources of alternative energy, the potential to recover non-recycled plastics is enormous," said Steve Russell, vice president of plastics for the American Chemistry Council. "According to scientists at Columbia University, if the United States were to recover the energy from our non-recycled plastics, this material could be converted into enough energy to fuel the equivalent of 6 million cars annually."

The American Chemistry Council funded the study, "Conversion Technology: A Complement to Plastics Recycling," to examine available technologies, feedstocks, growth models for technology abroad and in North America, opportunities and barriers, and outlook for growth in the United States. The information presented is intended to help inform government officials, plastics reclaimers, materials recovery facility managers, and investors about the range of available technologies and under what conditions each could fit in commercial or community waste management plans.

Consistent with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's waste management hierarchy - reduce, reuse, recycle, recover - plastics-to-fuel technologies do not compete with recyclers for material. Rather, they tend to make use of non-recycled plastics - and in many cases run more efficiently with non-recycled plastics - which they convert into crude oil and other types of fuels.

For more information, contact:
Jennifer Killinger (202) 249-6619
jennifer_killinger@americanchemistry.com.

The study is available at www.americanchemistry.com/s_plastics/bin.asp?CID=1211&DID=11911&DOC=FILE.PDF.

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