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IRVING – ExxonMobil has announced the successful startup of one of the largest advanced recycling plants in North America located at the company’s integrated manufacturing complex in Baytown, Texas.

The plant uses proprietary technology to break down hard-to-recycle plastics and transform them into raw materials for new products. It is capable of processing more than 80 million pounds of plastic waste per year, helping divert such waste currently sent to landfills.

“We’ve proven our proprietary advanced recycling technology at Baytown, and now we’re building on our scale and integration to increase the production of certified circular plastics to meet growing demand,” said Karen McKee, president of ExxonMobil Product Solutions. “There is substantial demand for recycled plastics, and advanced recycling can play an important role by breaking down plastics that could not be recycled by traditional, mechanical methods. We are collaborating with government, industry and communities to scale up the collection and sorting of plastic waste that will improve recycling rates and help our customers around the world meet their sustainability goals.”

Since the start of pilot operations at Baytown last year, ExxonMobil has recycled nearly 15 million pounds of plastic waste. The proprietary Exxtend technology enables the breakdown of plastic waste that would previously be destined for landfills – from synthetic football fields to bubble wrap and motor oil bottles.

Collection and sorting

The company helped form Cyclyx International, a joint venture created to collect and sort large volumes of plastic waste and is investing in a first-of-its-kind plastic waste processing facility in Houston to help supply the Baytown operation.

ExxonMobil plans to build advanced recycling facilities at many of its other manufacturing sites around the world, which would give it the capacity to process up to 1 billion pounds of plastic waste annually by year-end 2026. The company is assessing facilities in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Beaumont, Texas and Joliet, Illinois, as well as sites in Belgium, the Netherlands, Singapore and Canada.

The company is also collaborating with third parties to assess the potential for large-scale implementation of advanced recycling technologies and opportunities to support improvements to plastic waste collection and sorting in Malaysia and Indonesia. It has commercial contracts to sell certified circular plastics to customers around the world for use in food-safe plastic packaging, including collaborations with Amcor, Ahold Delhaize, Berry Global and Sealed Air.

Advanced recycling is a proven technology that can help accelerate a circular economy and address the challenge of plastic waste. With effective government policies in place to modernise the recycling system and improve waste collection, more plastic materials can be collected, sorted and recycled, especially those that aren’t easily recycled today.

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