Unilever launches process for recycling plastic sachets

Pilot plant in Indonesia will apply CreaSolv approach for recovering plastic from waste

London Unilever has unveiled new  technology for recycling sachet waste: the  CreaSolv Process, developed with the Fraunhofer  Institute for Process Engineering and  Packaging IVV in Germany and inspired by  an innovation used to recycle TV sets.

Billions of single-use sachets are sold every  year, particularly in developing and emerging  markets. Sachets are extremely resource  efficient and allow low-income consumers to buy  small amounts of products that would otherwise  be unaffordable to them. But without a viable  recycling solution, sachet packaging ends up in  landfill or as litter. As part of its Sustainable Living  Plan, Unilever has long been committed to  finding an alternative to throwing sachets away.

CreaSolv has been adapted from a method  used to separate brominated flame retardants  from waste electrical and electronic  equipment polymers. The plastic is recovered  from the sachet and used to create new  sachets for Unilever products, creating a full  circular economy approach.

“Billions of sachets are used once and just  thrown away, all over the world, ending up  in landfill or in our waterways and oceans,”  said David Blanchard, chief R&D officer.

“At the start of this year we made a  commitment to help solve this problem,  developing new recycling technologies. We  intend to make this tech open source and  would hope to scale the technology with  industry partners, so others including our  competitors can use it.”

Unilever will open a pilot plant in Indonesia  later this year to test the long-term  commercial viability of the technology. Indonesia  is a critical country in which to tackle  waste as it produce 64m tonnes every year, of  which 1.3m tonnes ends up in the ocean.

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