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Republic Services finishes Indiana sorting center build

  • Market: Petrochemicals
  • 14/02/25

US-based materials recovery facility operator and hauler Republic Services has finished construction on its second polymer center in Indianapolis, with initial income from the plant expected in the second half of the year, the company said in its earnings call.

Republic Service's polymer centers are secondary sorting facilities that produce recycled polyethylene terephthalate flake and color sort high-density polyethylene and polypropylene waste to sell to reprocessors.

Republic Services faced some challenges in the third quarter and fourth quarter of 2024 with startup costs for equipment and getting specifications correct for customers at its operational polymer center in Las Vegas, but after those initial hurdles, the company was "feeling good" about them, chief executive John Vander Ark said.

The company's prior assumptions about production in Las Vegas in terms of selling price, costs, volume sold, and the willingness of customers to pay were really "strong" and "positive," he added.

Republic Services finished construction on its Las Vegas polymer center in December 2023.

The polymer centers are strategically located next to joint venture Blue Polymers' facilities. Republic Services plans to provide feedstocks to Blue Polymers in order to produce pelletized and compounded recycled resin.

Blue Polymers is expected to finish construction on its first plant in Indianapolis in mid-2025, Republic Services said.

Republic Services aims to spend $75mn on new polymer centers in 2025.


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11/07/25

Mass-balance consultation questions remain: BlueAlp

Mass-balance consultation questions remain: BlueAlp

London, 11 July (Argus) — Some uncertainty remains over the correct interpretation of the draft of rules governing the inclusion of chemically-recycled plastics towards EU recycled content targets, BlueAlp chief executive Valentijn De Neve told Argus , but he said that an initial reading threw up some encouraging signs and some concerns. The European Commission opened a public consultation on a draft update of the implementing decision for the Single-Use Plastic Directive (SUPD) — which would provide details on how the 25pc recycled content requirement for PET beverage bottles can be met — on 8 July. It includes proposed rules around the use of mass-balance accounting to allocate chemically-recycled content. It is seen by many in the industry as a likely precedent for the rules that will apply to the EU's Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR), which will become the primary legislation governing recycled content targets for plastic packaging from 2030. De Neve said that he is still looking to understand the full connotations of the draft document put forward by the commission. At first reading he is encouraged that it appears to open up the possibility of plastic-derived pyrolysis oil (PPO) being processed in existing assets — refineries — as well as on-purpose upgrading facilities. This is "key in getting [the PPO market] to a realistic and larger market, and to fulfil the sustainability criteria that we've jointly set", he said. De Neve expressed some possible reservations on whether recognition of what share of input "really translates into circular plastics versus what becomes fuel" when the supply chain includes a refinery step has been "sufficiently captured" in the draft. But he said that he would discuss this within the Chemical Recycling Europe industry association, which would co-ordinate a response to the consultation. De Neve also said that the proposed extension of the definition of post-consumer plastic waste to include waste from products placed in non-EU markets — which would enable recyclates based on non-EU waste to count towards the recycled content targets — risks attracting import pressure from producers in lower-cost regions without sufficient additional controls. "We need to make sure… whether you're operating inside or outside the EU, that the same rules apply and it's a level playing field", he said. PPWR contains a so-called "mirror clause" stating that recyclers from outside the EU should be held to the same environmental standards as domestic operators. But no such clause exists in the SUPD, or elsewhere in the draft implementing decision released under consultation. By Will Collins Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Europe ELV directive may not be ambitious enough: EuRIC


09/07/25
News
09/07/25

Europe ELV directive may not be ambitious enough: EuRIC

London, 9 July (Argus) — European circular automotive ambitions are at risk before they have started, according to European recycling industries association EuRIC. Following the European Parliament's vote on the end of life vehicles (ELV) directive yesterday , EuRIC warned that low recycled content targets, loopholes and legal uncertainties risk holding back the investments and market confidence needed to scale Europe's circular ELV economy in practice. The parliament's committees agreed on a reduced recycled content target for plastics to 20pc, with only 10pc post-consumer, and a closed-loop target to 15pc, within six years of the rules' entry into force. The recycled content target is increased to 25pc within 10 years of entry into force, but half of the target can be met with pre-consumer waste. EuRIC said the vote on ELV regulation is a welcome step for the industry but feels the targets fall short of the potential for the market, ignoring the European Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC) evidence that higher post-consumer recycled content targets are feasible and realistic. Unclear review clauses add further risk for recyclers already facing a 30pc recycling obligation without guaranteed markets according to the association. With the European recycling industry under pressure, EuRIC also highlighted the lack of a mirror clause for imports under fair conditions further threatens European recyclers. The association urged co-legislators to strengthen targets and close loopholes in the next steps of negotiations. By Chloe Kinner Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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EU opens chemical recycling mass balance consultation


08/07/25
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08/07/25

EU opens chemical recycling mass balance consultation

London, 8 July (Argus) — The European Commission has opened a public consultation on chemical recycling, specifically related to a proposed update to the implementing decision for the Single-Use Plastics Directive (SUPD). The draft update includes rules for mass-balance accounting of chemically-recycled content towards the SUPD's recycled content targets, and would allow recyclates produced from non-EU post-consumer waste to count towards EU targets. The commission is seeking feedback on a proposed fuel use-excluded approach to mass balance accounting. In this, the amount of circular feedstock eligible to be assigned as recycled content to polymers would be calculated by taking the amount fed into a steam cracker and assigning it to one of four output groups — non-fuels, fuels, losses and dual-use outputs — based on the proportion of each that the cracker produces. Cracker operators could then allocate an amount of recycled content — sometimes termed by market participants as recycled credits — to their products, equal to the amount of eligible feedstock assigned to the non-fuels output group, or to any dual-use outputs that can be provably shown to be retained in the chemical/polymer chain rather than entering the fuels chain. The draft document also lays out rules for allocating recycled content to cracker feedstock where mass balance accounting is required before the steam cracker stage of the polymer production process, which Argus understands to be a reference to refining or pre-treatment of pyrolysis oil. This would be based on the amount of recycled feedstock input into the refining or pre-treatment plant that evaporates below the maximum feedstock boiling point the intended steam cracker customer can accept, as a ratio to the total amount of material input into the former plant. The same ratio of recycled content could then be applied to materials supplied to the steam cracker customer. Basing allocation of recycled content on input before the steam cracker stage, rather than output, would appear to open the door to processing of pyrolysis oil in refineries that produce mainly fuels, without a large proportion of credits being lost to the fuels pool under fuel use-exempt rules. Argus is seeking clarification on this. In addition to the mass balance rules, the draft extends the definition of post-consumer plastic waste to include that produced from products placed on the market outside the EU. This would align the definition with that used in the recently-adopted Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation, and mean recyclates based on non-EU waste could count towards the 25pc recycled content for polyethylene terephthalate (PET) beverage bottles contained in the SUPD. The consultation will run until 19 August. By Will Collins Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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PVC producer Vynova to close Beek site


08/07/25
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08/07/25

PVC producer Vynova to close Beek site

London, 8 July (Argus) — European chlor-vinyls producer Vynova said it intends to close its 225,000 t/yr PVC producing site in Beek, the Netherlands, by November 2025. The company said pressures on the site included "global overcapacity, persistently weak demand and increased competition from regions with lower production costs and less stringent regulations". Vynova said it did not expect these conditions to improve in the short term. The company also operates a 275,000 t/yr capacity PVC producing site in Mazingarbe, France, and a 340,000 t/yr site in Wilhelmshaven, Germany. Two PVC producing sites in Europe have already closed this year — a 135,000 t/yr capacity plant in Spolana, Czech Republic, and a smaller site operated by Fortischem in Slovakia. By George Barsted Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Dow to close German cracker, other assets by 4Q 2027


07/07/25
News
07/07/25

Dow to close German cracker, other assets by 4Q 2027

London, 7 July (Argus) — US chemicals firm Dow said today it will permanently close its ethylene cracker in Bohlen, Germany, and chlor-alkali and vinyl assets in nearby Schkopau, in the fourth quarter of 2027. It will close its siloxanes plant in Barry, UK, in mid-2026. "The shutdown of upstream assets in Europe will right-size regional capacity, reduce merchant sale exposure, and remove higher-cost, energy-intensive portions of Dow's portfolio in the region," the company said. The assets were included in Dow's strategic review in April. It said at the time the sites were being considered for idling or closure. The Bohlen cracker has a nameplate capacity of 540,000 t/yr of ethylene and a propylene capacity of 285,000 t/yr. It also has a butadiene extraction unit with a nameplate capacity of 105,000 t/yr. At Schkopau, Dow has a membrane cell chlor-alkali capacity of 250,000 t/yr and 740,000 t/yr of ethylene dichloride capacity. The site previously had around 330,000 t/yr of capacity for chloride monomer (VCM) production, with two lines operating at the site, but Dow closed the larger of the two lines to reduce capacity to roughly 110,000 t/yr earlier in 2024. Dow's polyethylene assets in Schkopau — a 210,000 t/yr LLD-HDPE unit and 108,000 t/yr LDPE unit — were not part of the review and will continue to operate. Dow said closure of the upstream assets would "improve our ability to supply profitable derivative demand and optimise margins". The PE units can utilise an ethylene pipeline that runs between them and Dow's storage and import infrastructure in Stade, Germany. The extended lead-time of the closures will allow Dow to wind down existing contracts and give customers time to attempt to source alternative material. Customers include the former Dow polypropylene plant at Schkopau, which it sold to Brazil-based petrochemical company Braskem in 2011 and that receives feedstock propylene from the Boehlen cracker. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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