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BASF, a global leader in the chemical industry, has a clear mission to create chemistry for a sustainable future. The three pillars of sustainability – the economy, environment, and society – are firmly anchored into our corporate purpose, strategy, targets and operations. We aim to be NetZero by 2050, and one thing we are doing to get there is aligning our product portfolio with climate protection, carbon neutrality, and circularity. Plastics and how to effectively recycle them and bring them back into the circular economy certainly plays a role for us. This article will explore how BASF is making strides in our plastics journey.
Sustainable Material Development BASF is on a path to transform plastics and make the lifecycle more sustainable. We work with our R&D teams and with partners along the value chain to co-create new sustainable materials that make it easier to recycle at the end of life, as well as devising ways to take waste and turn it into a valuable resource. One recent example of the latter is the product Loopamid®, a high-quality polyamide co-created by BASF and Inditex, one of the world’s largest fashion retailers. It’s the first circular solution for nylon apparel made entirely from textile waste using chemical recycling. With 92 million tons of textile waste being landfilled every year, this innovation is quite timely and shows circular fashion in action. Recycling & Advanced Sorting Technologies BASF is investing in recycling technologies to tackle the challenges associated with plastic waste. Mechanical recycling is the process of recovering plastic waste via sorting, shredding, melting, and transforming it into secondary raw materials for new applications. In North America, BASF has a mechanically recycled grade of polyamide called Nypel® that can be made from post-consumer recycled and/or post-industrial recycled materials. It is currently being used to produce air intake manifolds in automobiles.BASF also partners with technology companies to scale chemical recycling as a complementing recycling technology that enables the recycling of plastic waste that cannot be recycled mechanically such as mixed plastic waste or end-of-life tires
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