Close×

ESE World has carried out the first practical experiment to demonstrate that HDPE can be recycled at least 10 times and further processed under controlled conditions.

The company has been a leader in the use of recycled plastics for the manufacture of containers for waste and recyclables for over 30 years.  Its advanced procedures and processes in the cleaning, additives and processing of the material enables ESE to make products from recycled plastics with the same quality as virgin material.

However, one question that has remained unanswered until now was how often HDPE can be processed, ground and reprocessed in injection moulding procedures without fundamentally changing the structure and characteristics of the material.

ESE established a controlled experimental model at its production facility that enabled virgin HDPE to be reused 10 times.  After each step the material was analysed in cooperation with external research institutions using state-of-the-art methods.  The project was led by ESE’s plastics specialist and scientist Jeanett Köhn, PhD.

The test demonstrated for the first time that the injection moulding process and shredding of the plastics have, in principle, no property-altering effects on the material over this entire period of reuse. With the service life of containers being around 10 to 20 years, this result means that the availability of material for sustainable production from the same recycled plastic is secured for at least 100 to 200 years.

Udo Fröhlingsdorf, director of Product Development & Marketing at ESE, is very pleased with the test results: "Decades of developments under production conditions have put us in the position to process and treat recycled material in such a way that the quality of the products is on a par with virgin material," he says.

"The findings of this series of experiments now allow us to engage in more targeted research and to develop further future-oriented methods."

 

 

Food & Drink Business

Victorian producer, Doreen Egg Aust, has paid $39,600 in penalties after the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) issued two infringement notices over alleged false or misleading claims that its eggs were free range.

A coalition of global food waste organisations has called on the COP31 presidency to turn existing commitments on food loss and waste into funded policy. It’s a move with direct relevance to Australia, which holds the presidency of negotiations for this year’s climate summit.

Inghams has placed its Western Australian farms and processing operations into complete lockdown after authorities confirmed Australia’s first detection of the high pathogenicity H5 avian influenza strain that has spread globally since 2020.