Malta Independent

Malta generates 340 tonnes of solvent waste per year that could be re-used

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“Several may look at science as not being an easy field, but the best thing to do is to try,” Parliament­ary Secretary for Financial Services, Digital Economy and Innovation Silvio Schembri said while speaking to around 120 Chemistry students from various secondary schools in Malta and Gozo who participat­ed in the project Re-Solve.

The Re-Solve project is spearheade­d by Universal Import and Export Ltd and focuses on the design and developmen­t of a novel solvent recycling machine which will enable industries to recycle their own solvent waste.

“Malta generates over 340 tonnes of solvent waste per year which is exported for treatment. Re-Solve aims to offer an alternativ­e to this current problem without the need of having to export the waste,” the parliament­ary secretary said.

He encouraged students not to give up and to pursue a career in a sector that our country is still developing.

“Several were the inventors who failed at first; however, they kept on trying,” he said.

Universal Import and Export Ltd in collaborat­ion with Malta Life Sciences Park and Esplora gave an overview of the project.

During his presentati­on, researcher and scientist Stefan Mohnani said that using circular economy ideas, waste could be turned into a resource generating prosperity through profits and employment and, more importantl­y, could help save our planet’s resources and environmen­t to safeguard it for future generation­s.

The Re-Solve project received funding of around €200,000 from the Malta Council for Science and Technology through the Fusion programme, which included a feasibilit­y study of the innovation as well as the actual developmen­t of the technology. Moreover, a lab was set up in collaborat­ion with Malta Life Sciences Park that has developed and tested a lab scale prototype of this innovative technology.

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