Plastic Recycling, Inc. is the latest company to open North American capacity for e-plastics. | Courtesy of PRI[/caption]
Indianapolis-based Plastic Recycling, Inc. has expanded with a project that underscores the opportunities and complexities in recycling plastics from scrap electronics.
PRI invested roughly $2 million to install a system that produces clean recycled flake from e-plastics, Brandon Shaw, PRI's marketing manager, told Resource Recycling. The material is sorted by polymer.
PRI is processing the polyethylene/polypropylene (PE/PP), acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and polystyrene (PS) flakes into plastic pellets. Most of the pellets will be sold, but some will be molded by a PRI-owned manufacturer into plastic cores for paper rolls.
"Our end goal is to recycle this stuff – breathe new life into it – and sell it back to [original equipment manufacturers]," said Josh Barrick, who oversees marketing and purchasing for PRI. "Also, it would be very, very nice to get it back into electronics."
[caption id="attachment_18734" align="aligncenter" width="900"]
Plastic Recycling, Inc. is the latest company to open North American capacity for e-plastics. | Courtesy of PRI[/caption]
Indianapolis-based Plastic Recycling, Inc. has expanded with a project that underscores the opportunities and complexities in recycling plastics from scrap electronics.
PRI invested roughly $2 million to install a system that produces clean recycled flake from e-plastics, Brandon Shaw, PRI's marketing manager, told Resource Recycling. The material is sorted by polymer.
PRI is processing the polyethylene/polypropylene (PE/PP), acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and polystyrene (PS) flakes into plastic pellets. Most of the pellets will be sold, but some will be molded by a PRI-owned manufacturer into plastic cores for paper rolls.
"Our end goal is to recycle this stuff – breathe new life into it – and sell it back to [original equipment manufacturers]," said Josh Barrick, who oversees marketing and purchasing for PRI. "Also, it would be very, very nice to get it back into electronics."
Plastic Recycling, Inc. is the latest company to open North American capacity for e-plastics. | Courtesy of PRI[/caption]
Indianapolis-based Plastic Recycling, Inc. has expanded with a project that underscores the opportunities and complexities in recycling plastics from scrap electronics.
PRI invested roughly $2 million to install a system that produces clean recycled flake from e-plastics, Brandon Shaw, PRI's marketing manager, told Resource Recycling. The material is sorted by polymer.
PRI is processing the polyethylene/polypropylene (PE/PP), acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and polystyrene (PS) flakes into plastic pellets. Most of the pellets will be sold, but some will be molded by a PRI-owned manufacturer into plastic cores for paper rolls.
"Our end goal is to recycle this stuff – breathe new life into it – and sell it back to [original equipment manufacturers]," said Josh Barrick, who oversees marketing and purchasing for PRI. "Also, it would be very, very nice to get it back into electronics."
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