The chart below on recycling progress by the major FMCG companies is timely as it bumps into plenty of “national recycling day” headlines which include as many stories around recycling polymers into new applications as stories about like for like recycling. The more polymer that moves through collection and sorting and into roadbeds or composite particleboard replacement, etc., the less there is available for the FMCG companies to meet recycling goals. We see this as a major opportunity for the renewable polymer makers, but it is unlikely that there will be enough renewable-based polymers available to close the 2025 gap for most of the companies listed below. What is likely, in our view, is that the packagers will embrace chemical recycling as a way to increase their recycled content and will strike very specific deals with those able to show a chain of custody from collection through new polymer production.
Recycle Availability Still Expected To Be A Headache For Packagers
Nov 16, 2021 1:02:05 PM / by Graham Copley posted in ESG, Recycling, Polymers, Sustainability, PET, Coca-Cola, polymer producers, renewable polymers, chemical recycling, low carbon, PepsiCo, Unilever, zero carbon, recycled polymers, FMCG, recycling goals