The development of a new domestic e-plastics outlet comes at a time of market turbulence for the low-value materials. | KPixMining/Shutterstock[/caption]
An Indiana plastics processing operation will consume roughly 40 million pounds of plastic from e-scrap and other products annually. Brightmark Energy plans to start up the facility in mid-2020.
The operation, currently in development in Ashley, Ind., will bring in a variety of plastics, particularly materials in the mixed plastic Nos. 3-7 stream. The facility, which is being developed by San Francisco waste and energy commercialization firm Brightmark Energy, this week announced a partnership with an e-scrap company.
RecycleForce, an Indianapolis nonprofit e-scrap organization, will supply Brightmark with up to 3.4 million pounds per month of ABS, PC and other polymers from TVs, computers, medical devices, car seats and other products.
In an interview, Brightmark CEO Bob Powell said the facility will use a pyrolysis process to convert plastic waste into a few types of fuels or other chemical products, including commercial-grade waxes. Pyrolysis involves chemically breaking materials down by heating them in an oxygenless environment.
"If the plastics are baled, we will de-bale those plastics and feed them into our process, where we shred, dry and pelletize into pretty small pellets," Powell said. Those pellets are then fed into the pyrolysis system, which converts them into ultra-low-sulphur diesel and naphtha blend stocks, which are used in fuel production.
The facility broke ground in April 2019 after receiving $260 million in funding. Located on a 40-acre site, the plant is on schedule to be completed in late spring or summer 2020 and to be operating at full production scale by the end of the year, Powell said.
[caption id="attachment_12804" align="aligncenter" width="900"]
The development of a new domestic e-plastics outlet comes at a time of market turbulence for the low-value materials. | KPixMining/Shutterstock[/caption]
An Indiana plastics processing operation will consume roughly 40 million pounds of plastic from e-scrap and other products annually. Brightmark Energy plans to start up the facility in mid-2020.
The operation, currently in development in Ashley, Ind., will bring in a variety of plastics, particularly materials in the mixed plastic Nos. 3-7 stream. The facility, which is being developed by San Francisco waste and energy commercialization firm Brightmark Energy, this week announced a partnership with an e-scrap company.
RecycleForce, an Indianapolis nonprofit e-scrap organization, will supply Brightmark with up to 3.4 million pounds per month of ABS, PC and other polymers from TVs, computers, medical devices, car seats and other products.
In an interview, Brightmark CEO Bob Powell said the facility will use a pyrolysis process to convert plastic waste into a few types of fuels or other chemical products, including commercial-grade waxes. Pyrolysis involves chemically breaking materials down by heating them in an oxygenless environment.
"If the plastics are baled, we will de-bale those plastics and feed them into our process, where we shred, dry and pelletize into pretty small pellets," Powell said. Those pellets are then fed into the pyrolysis system, which converts them into ultra-low-sulphur diesel and naphtha blend stocks, which are used in fuel production.
The facility broke ground in April 2019 after receiving $260 million in funding. Located on a 40-acre site, the plant is on schedule to be completed in late spring or summer 2020 and to be operating at full production scale by the end of the year, Powell said.
The development of a new domestic e-plastics outlet comes at a time of market turbulence for the low-value materials. | KPixMining/Shutterstock[/caption]
An Indiana plastics processing operation will consume roughly 40 million pounds of plastic from e-scrap and other products annually. Brightmark Energy plans to start up the facility in mid-2020.
The operation, currently in development in Ashley, Ind., will bring in a variety of plastics, particularly materials in the mixed plastic Nos. 3-7 stream. The facility, which is being developed by San Francisco waste and energy commercialization firm Brightmark Energy, this week announced a partnership with an e-scrap company.
RecycleForce, an Indianapolis nonprofit e-scrap organization, will supply Brightmark with up to 3.4 million pounds per month of ABS, PC and other polymers from TVs, computers, medical devices, car seats and other products.
In an interview, Brightmark CEO Bob Powell said the facility will use a pyrolysis process to convert plastic waste into a few types of fuels or other chemical products, including commercial-grade waxes. Pyrolysis involves chemically breaking materials down by heating them in an oxygenless environment.
"If the plastics are baled, we will de-bale those plastics and feed them into our process, where we shred, dry and pelletize into pretty small pellets," Powell said. Those pellets are then fed into the pyrolysis system, which converts them into ultra-low-sulphur diesel and naphtha blend stocks, which are used in fuel production.
The facility broke ground in April 2019 after receiving $260 million in funding. Located on a 40-acre site, the plant is on schedule to be completed in late spring or summer 2020 and to be operating at full production scale by the end of the year, Powell said.
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