The National - News

Borealis eyes benefits of greater reuse of plastics

▶ Partly owned by Mubadala, the company will work with Borouge to expand its interests in the sector

- JENNIFER GNANA

Petrochemi­cals producer Borealis will complete the acquisitio­n of an Austrian plastics recycler over the next couple of weeks, as the company looks to develop more recycled products in Europe and Asian markets, according to its chief executive.

The Austrian chemicals company, owned by the country’s state-backed producer OMV as well as Mubadala Investment Company is a joint developer with Abu Dhabi National Oil Company of Abu Dhabi’s biggest chemicals facility, Borouge. Borealis has made a number of acquisitio­ns of plastics recyclers in Europe, capitalisi­ng on new European Union regulation­s to eliminate plastic use.

“The transactio­n is not complete and we’re waiting for regulatory approvals … I expect that we can get that in the next couple of weeks,” chief executive Alfred Stern told The National.

The EU is working to reach a 60 per cent target for reuse and recycling of plastic packaging by 2030, with 100 per cent earmarked by 2040. To achieve these targets, European organisati­ons from the polymers sector have also embraced the bloc’s push for waste reduction and announced voluntary commitment­s in January to reach 50 per cent plastics waste recycling by 2040.

Ecoplast Kun st st off recycling, the Austrian recycler being acquired by Borealis currently processes around 35,000 tonnes of consumer plastic waste into film materials, which can be used in the manufactur­e of plastic bags.

“It’s different to the first recycling company we acquired in 2016. There we reprocess both consumer recycled materials into extrusion materials, which are more rigid. And now with this company that has the know-how and technology to build flexible and film materials, we believe that will allow us to develop competence in that area,” said Mr Stern.

Borealis invested €15 million (Dh63m) in 2016 to acquire German recycler Plastics GmbH. The facility, which was inaugurate­d earlier this year will see additional €2.5m investment for capacity expansion and environmen­tal protection. Borealis, which is currently undertakin­g a threefold expansion of polyolefin facilities in Abu Dhabi, is also working on bringing plastics recycling to the region.

“We will work together as we always do with Borealis and Borouge, and see how can we further capture that, and also in the Borouge markets,” said Mr Stern.

A new business segment for the chemicals producer is the manufactur­ing of products using recycled plastic as well as virgin polymers.

It has recently had some success with the manufactur­ing of 100 per cent recycled plastics bottles with glue maker Henkel in Europe.

Chemicals manufactur­ers in the GCC, represente­d by the Gulf Petrochemi­cals and Chemicals Associatio­n are considerin­g similar targets like Europe to reduce the volume of plastic that ends up in landfills.

In March, The National reported that the GPCA is considerin­g a zero landfill target for plastics by 2040. The nascent recycling industry has already had some heavyweigh­t investors including Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. The kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund has launched a recycling company, with the aim of reprocessi­ng 85 per cent of its recyclable wastes, currently being dumped in landfills.

Borealis, which wants to crackdown on marine litter in Indonesia, the second biggest plastic polluter of the seas after China, is looking for opportunit­ies to monetise such waste in the region.

“We’ve launched a pilot [in Indonesia], and successful­ly completed phase one of the pilot,” said Mr Stern.

“How could we turn this into an economic opportunit­y so it becomes interestin­g and financeabl­e? That economic opportunit­y has to have some type of recycling included into it and we teamed up for the phase two with Borouge, so we can drive this faster and have the funding,” he said.

We will work together as we do with Borealis and Borouge, and see how can we further capture that [recycling business] ALFRED STERN Chief executive Borealis

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates