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Last year marked a watershed moment for the reduction in plastic pollution in China, its move to reduce the use of single-use plastic is another positive vector supporting the global movement to retail consumption of plastics. Much of China’s plastic waste is produced domestically, and offer large opportunities for recycle and second-life markets where value is brought to the waste. The 2018 enforcement of the Basel Convention and its restriction on the import of second-life materials sent shockwaves through regions that had failed to invest in their own recycling capacities, including United States, Europe, Japan, Australia and Hong Kong.


With over 40,000 variations in the way plastic products are made, it can be argued that solving plastic pollution is more complicated than bringing resolution to climate change. This does not mean that the impacts of plastic pollution are necessarily greater, but given the opportunities for innovation, job creation, and formation of the global circular economy, the global plastic import restrictions can shift to be either China’s or the United States’ golden opportunity to create a circular economy using non-virgin materials.


See the full article on Medium – Beyond Institute

Stimulated by consumer sentiment, corporate commitments, anti-pollution regulation, access to funds and new business models, market demand for recycled plastic has moved from niche and "nice to have" to the new norm as the second-highest packaging trend for 2020. Supply channels for this pent-up demand are far from adequate, but the starter’s gun has fired, signaling that recycled plastic has become a market category in its own right.


See the full article here in Greenbiz.



By Trish Hyde and Doug Woodring, Urbanet


In a world reliant on global trade, plastic waste has become toxic. The heady mix of plastic waste, global damage, and national interest has sparked two sparring matches, and another is set to begin. What does it mean and what are the business take-outs?


How it All Started


Western countries have relied on trade under the guise of exporting recyclable resources, when in fact this process was “easy off-shoring” of domestic plastic waste liabilities. As much as 40 per cent of every bale shipped was not able to be recycled in the importing nation, therefore often entering the environment via dumping or toxic, open-flame burning.



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