RePolyTex is gearing up to operate its Madison, N.C. facility at full scale, manufacturing a "plastic plywood" product from shredded e-plastics. | Courtesy of RePolyTex.[/caption]
A U.S. plastics recycling and manufacturing facility is preparing to begin taking in plastics recovered from electronics. The plant will use that feedstock to produce construction materials.
RePolyTex is gearing up to operate its Madison, N.C. facility at full scale, with project leaders anticipating the facility will begin test production in the coming weeks. The plant will bring in a variety of shredded plastics recovered from electronics, and it will use those materials to manufacture a "plastic plywood" product suited for a range of construction applications.
The project is being carried out in partnership with Synergy Electronics Recycling, which operates an electronics processing plant near the RePolyTex facility. Once running, RePolyTex will take all of the shredded e-plastics Synergy recovers from printers, fax machines and other e-scrap devices.
"We want the low-grade, plastic-rich material," said Jason Price, president of Synergy.
Lee Clayton, chief technology officer for RePolyTex, said the quality of Synergy's e-plastic is part of what drew him to the project. Synergy produces "a great base material to work from," he explained.
Besides RePolyTex and Synergy, TwoRivers ITAD Solutions is an additional investor in the project. The ITAD firm is based in a 40,000-square-foot facility in Lithonia, Ga.
The project was one of several materials recovery efforts that received a recent grant from the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality.
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RePolyTex is gearing up to operate its Madison, N.C. facility at full scale, manufacturing a "plastic plywood" product from shredded e-plastics. | Courtesy of RePolyTex.[/caption]
A U.S. plastics recycling and manufacturing facility is preparing to begin taking in plastics recovered from electronics. The plant will use that feedstock to produce construction materials.
RePolyTex is gearing up to operate its Madison, N.C. facility at full scale, with project leaders anticipating the facility will begin test production in the coming weeks. The plant will bring in a variety of shredded plastics recovered from electronics, and it will use those materials to manufacture a "plastic plywood" product suited for a range of construction applications.
The project is being carried out in partnership with Synergy Electronics Recycling, which operates an electronics processing plant near the RePolyTex facility. Once running, RePolyTex will take all of the shredded e-plastics Synergy recovers from printers, fax machines and other e-scrap devices.
"We want the low-grade, plastic-rich material," said Jason Price, president of Synergy.
Lee Clayton, chief technology officer for RePolyTex, said the quality of Synergy's e-plastic is part of what drew him to the project. Synergy produces "a great base material to work from," he explained.
Besides RePolyTex and Synergy, TwoRivers ITAD Solutions is an additional investor in the project. The ITAD firm is based in a 40,000-square-foot facility in Lithonia, Ga.
The project was one of several materials recovery efforts that received a recent grant from the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality.
RePolyTex is gearing up to operate its Madison, N.C. facility at full scale, manufacturing a "plastic plywood" product from shredded e-plastics. | Courtesy of RePolyTex.[/caption]
A U.S. plastics recycling and manufacturing facility is preparing to begin taking in plastics recovered from electronics. The plant will use that feedstock to produce construction materials.
RePolyTex is gearing up to operate its Madison, N.C. facility at full scale, with project leaders anticipating the facility will begin test production in the coming weeks. The plant will bring in a variety of shredded plastics recovered from electronics, and it will use those materials to manufacture a "plastic plywood" product suited for a range of construction applications.
The project is being carried out in partnership with Synergy Electronics Recycling, which operates an electronics processing plant near the RePolyTex facility. Once running, RePolyTex will take all of the shredded e-plastics Synergy recovers from printers, fax machines and other e-scrap devices.
"We want the low-grade, plastic-rich material," said Jason Price, president of Synergy.
Lee Clayton, chief technology officer for RePolyTex, said the quality of Synergy's e-plastic is part of what drew him to the project. Synergy produces "a great base material to work from," he explained.
Besides RePolyTex and Synergy, TwoRivers ITAD Solutions is an additional investor in the project. The ITAD firm is based in a 40,000-square-foot facility in Lithonia, Ga.
The project was one of several materials recovery efforts that received a recent grant from the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality.
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