Advertisement Header Ad
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion

    Certification Scorecard for December 3, 2025

    Industry Announcements for Week of December 1

    News from Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations, Precision E-Cycle

    News from Northeast Recycling Council, Plastipak and more

    News from Northeast Recycling Council, Sortera Technologies and more

    News from MKV Polymers, Metallium Ltd. and more

    Certification Scorecard for November 19, 2025

    News from American Beverage, Inteplast Group and more

    News from Action Carting Environmental Services, International Paper and more

  • Conferences
  • Publications

    Other Topics

    Textiles
    Organics
    Packaging
    Glass
    Brand Owners

    Metals
    Technology
    Research
    Markets
    Grant Watch

    All Topics

Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion

    Certification Scorecard for December 3, 2025

    Industry Announcements for Week of December 1

    News from Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations, Precision E-Cycle

    News from Northeast Recycling Council, Plastipak and more

    News from Northeast Recycling Council, Sortera Technologies and more

    News from MKV Polymers, Metallium Ltd. and more

    Certification Scorecard for November 19, 2025

    News from American Beverage, Inteplast Group and more

    News from Action Carting Environmental Services, International Paper and more

  • Conferences
  • Publications

    Other Topics

    Textiles
    Organics
    Packaging
    Glass
    Brand Owners

    Metals
    Technology
    Research
    Markets
    Grant Watch

    All Topics

Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home Analysis Opinion

In My Opinion: Yes, plastics circularity is achievable

byAnna Rajkovic, NOVA Chemicals
August 25, 2021
in Opinion
In My Opinion: Yes, plastics circularity is achievable
Share on XLinkedin
A leader at NOVA Chemicals says ease of recycling access is essential to build circularity in plastics. | spwidoff / Shutterstock

Plastics make our everyday lives healthier, easier and safer. At the same time, plastics have no place in our oceans, waterways and natural spaces – nor do they belong in our landfills. Plastics are simply too valuable to end up as waste.

Thanks in part to support from organizations such as the Ellen MacArthur Foundation and the World Wildlife Fund, the value chain – including plastic manufacturers, converters, brand owners and retailers – is now working toward a common vision of plastic circularity.

At NOVA Chemicals, we are proud to play our part in the systemic transformation underway from a linear to a circular plastics economy. Through our innovation, collaboration and investment, we support the plastics industry goals that 100% of plastic packaging will be recyclable or recoverable by 2030 and re-used, recycled or recovered by 2040.

In this article, I’ll lay out how we in the plastics industry can hit those goals and achieve real circularity.

Anna Rajkovic
Anna Rajkovic

Key factors coming together

To start, it’s important to understand that there is a strong appetite to utilize more recovered resin.

In many models, growth rates for demand for recycled PET and recycled PE resins are expected to outstrip demand growth for virgin material significantly both in North America and globally, and anticipated recycled PE demand significantly exceeds current supply.

At the same time, China’s National Sword eliminated the customary offshore destination for between 40% and 70% of plastics collected for recycling in the U.S., requiring new outlets for up to 700,000 tons of additional material annually. On the legislative and policy front, there are a wide range of federal, state and municipal initiatives being advanced that seek to address our fundamental concerns around end-of-life plastics and low plastic recycling rates, along with establishing end markets.

How do we effectively take advantage of this moment? Step one is capturing more material.

In 2019, U.S. curbside capture rates for different plastics ranged from 22% to 53%, with bulky items and plastics Nos. 3-7 at the low end and natural HDPE containers at the high end. Increasing these rates is required for success. Consumer education must include both messaging that emphasizes the value of post-use plastics and consistent, easily understandable information about what and how to recycle.

Ease of access and simplicity are equally essential. Single-stream curbside recycling of all plastics, including flexibles and rigid plastics that are currently harder to recycle, offers the best opportunity to maximize collection. This may be ambitious, but only when enough of the plastics produced actually enter the recycling system can we shift from a linear to a circular model.

That being said, we may still need to consider alternative approaches to collection and sortation for films, tubes, small formats and other challenging packaging types.

Advancing the processing landscape

Maximizing our mechanical recycling stream is imperative from both an economic and climate change perspective. For this reason, plastic materials that can be mechanically recycled should be. For those that cannot, we will need to rely on advanced recycling (sometimes called chemical recycling), which takes harder-to-recycle plastics back to feedstocks. This is essential to capture the value of these materials and enable recycled content at scale in demanding applications such as food contact.

Many companies are working to develop advanced recycling, and experts predict that technologies will begin to reach scale near 2030. For advanced recycling to achieve market acceptance and traction, however, we will need changes to recycled-content definitions to include output from advanced recycling – an important element here is utilization of the principles of mass balance when calculating recycled content.

“Single-stream curbside recycling of all plastics, including flexibles and rigid plastics that are currently harder to recycle, offers the best opportunity to maximize collection.”

Another key to “closing the loop” is the establishment of national standards and a harmonized approach to recycling that encourages collection of more plastic material and improves quality and consistency across communities and the country. We are starting to see proposals from a variety of stakeholders, and we are encouraged and excited by all the energy and momentum that will propel us to find an optimal system.

Finally, end markets for post-consumer resin (PCR) must be optimized and economically viable for all materials.

Demand for recycled PET, recycled LLDPE and recycled HDPE is likely to exceed supply due to brand owner and retailer goals, and recyclers are focusing on expanding processing capabilities for these streams. However, some other types of plastic recyclate have few outlets and will continue to languish until end markets emerge or advanced recycling matures.

That leads us to a final key consideration: affordability. When it is more costly to produce the PCR than it can be sold for, there will be no investment to deliver the quality and quantity needed. Improved end markets are essential to deliver on value.

Linear outlets such as construction aggregate and plastic lumber that have traditionally valued the PCR primarily as a means to reduce input costs will always be needed as a home for “retired” plastics, but they are not the circular markets of the future.

How NOVA fits in

The plastics industry is in the midst of a once-in-a-lifetime shift, and we at NOVA Chemicals are shifting along with it.

For example, we have entered the PCR business. To date, we have announced agreements with two recyclers: Merlin Plastics, Canada’s largest plastics recycler and a major player in the western United States, and Revolution, the United States’ largest closed-loop recycler of agricultural films.

We have supplied Merlin with financing to expand their recycling capabilities to produce FDA-compliant recycled HDPE for food-contact applications. In addition, we recently commercialized our first three grades of recycled LLDPE, including Revolution’s agricultural film collection programs surplus. Ultimately, we will offer a robust portfolio of PCRs and blends in a range of melt indices and densities.

“To date, we have announced agreements with two recyclers: Merlin Plastics, Canada’s largest plastics recycler and a major player in the western United States, and Revolution, the United States’ largest closed-loop recycler of agricultural films.”

Meanwhile, in 2019, we released seven new “ready-to-recycle” resins that offer two key benefits for PCR incorporation. As virgin resins, they are designed to be used with PCR, allowing higher percentages of PCR content in applications that otherwise may require 100% virgin content to deliver required performance properties. At the same time, the robust additive formulation of the resins protects them during mechanical recycling, allowing them to retain their key physical performance through multiple uses.

Another significant advancement for recyclable packaging came last year with our development of high-density resin technology for the biaxially oriented polyethylene (BOPE) market. BOPE-HD is a transformative technology that enables the manufacture of all-polyethylene, multi-layer packaging that can replace non-recyclable, mixed-material packaging made today with layers such as BOPP, BOPET and/or metallization.

Finally, in May 2020, NOVA Chemicals entered into a joint development agreement with Montreal-based Enerkem, a producer of renewable fuels and chemicals from waste. The agreement allows us to explore a gasification advanced recycling technology that would turn non-recyclable and non-compostable municipal waste into ethylene, the primary feedstock for polyethylene.

A solvable problem

Society is faced with what is called the “plastics paradox,” a term popularized by plastics materials scientist Dr. Chris DeArmitt in his book by the same name. Plastic products enable life-saving medical devices and vaccine delivery; lighter, more fuel-efficient cars and planes; and the electronics that define the digital era. Usually, plastics provide these benefits using significantly fewer resources and with lower environmental impacts than alternative materials.

Yet plastics’ durability also means they don’t degrade quickly in the environment or landfill, and not enough of them are being recycled today. This is a solvable problem, one that requires us to reframe our perceptions of post-use plastics from a waste product to that of a resource. It will also take collaboration from the full value chain, including government, academia and NGOs.

Let’s work together to recover and reuse more plastics and achieve the ambitious goal of full plastics circularity in our time. Not only does the long-term success of the plastics industry depend upon it, but a world without plastic waste is the world we all want to live in.

 

Anna Rajkovic is circular economy market manager at NOVA Chemicals. She can be contacted at [email protected].

The views and opinions expressed are those of the author and do not imply endorsement by Resource Recycling, Inc. If you have a subject you wish to cover in an op-ed, please send a short proposal to [email protected] for consideration.

 

Anna Rajkovic, NOVA Chemicals

Anna Rajkovic, NOVA Chemicals

Related Posts

Women in Circularity: Shweta Srikanth

Women in Circularity: Shweta Srikanth

byMaryEllen Etienne
December 2, 2025

In this series, we spotlight women moving us toward a circular economy. Today, we meet Shweta Srikanth of Ecore International.

Women in circularity

byMaryEllen Etienne
September 14, 2021

This article appeared in the August 2021 issue of Resource Recycling. Subscribe today for access to all print content.   Across...

Women in Circularity: Christine Kiourtsis 

Women in Circularity: Christine Kiourtsis 

byMaryEllen Etienne
November 3, 2025

In this series, we spotlight women moving us toward a circular economy. Today, we meet Christine Kiourtsis of Renewable Recycling. 

EU auditors support incentives to keep recycling viable

EU auditors support incentives to keep recycling viable

byAntoinette Smith
December 2, 2025

In a recent report, the European Court of Auditors (ECA) called progress toward recycling targets "too slow," and offered several...

composting site minnesota

Minnesota seeks public input on packaging recycling plan

byPaul Lane
December 5, 2025

Minnesotans still have time to weigh in on the state’s extended producer responsibility (EPR) law before legislators finalize the details....

Analysis: Lenovo enters circular IT, ITAD territory

Analysis: Lenovo enters circular IT, ITAD territory

byDavid Daoud
December 3, 2025

Lenovo has launched a new Certified Refurbishment Services program across 14 EMEA countries, giving corporate customers an OEM-branded route to...

Load More
Next Post
Pyrolysis firm appoints Bill Caesar to board

Star exec says acquisition opens door to 'bigger, faster' growth

More Posts

Analysis: Q3 earnings confirm new industry priorities

Analysis: Q3 earnings confirm new industry priorities

November 13, 2025
Iron Mountain raises ITAD guidance on strong growth

Iron Mountain raises ITAD guidance on strong growth

November 13, 2025
ERCC outlines shift toward convenience benchmarks

ERCC outlines shift toward convenience benchmarks

November 13, 2025
Analysis: EU softens ESG rules as compliance pressure builds for US

Analysis: EU softens ESG rules as compliance pressure builds for US

November 20, 2025
Sector holds wide gaps in environmental standards

Sector holds wide gaps in environmental standards

November 20, 2025
From crawl to run: a clear roadmap for ITAD ESG

From crawl to run: a clear roadmap for ITAD ESG

November 20, 2025
New entrepreneurs bring renewed energy to e-cycling

New entrepreneurs bring renewed energy to e-cycling

November 20, 2025
The Re:Source Podcast Episode 1: E-Scrap look-back and 2026 outlook

The Re:Source Podcast Episode 1: E-Scrap look-back and 2026 outlook

November 21, 2025
ERI and ReElement partner on rare earth magnet recovery

ERI and ReElement partner on rare earth magnet recovery

November 26, 2025
Cyber risks confront ITAD work, contracts, coverage

Cyber risks confront ITAD work, contracts, coverage

November 26, 2025
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.