mba eu paper final

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Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11 th 2006. 1 Electronic Equipment: Plastics Recycling. - material recovery vs. energy recovery- Chris Slijkhuis, Dr. Darren F. Arola, Dr. Brian L. Riise, and Dr. Michael B. Biddle MBA Polymers, Wirtschaftspark, A-3331 Kematen/Ybbs Tel: +43-7476-77488 Mobile: +43-664-357 15 22 Email: [email protected] Web: www.mbapolymers.at Plastic recycling from durable products such as End-of Life Electronic equipment is new and finally technologically possible. Recycling these plastics is vital to reach the targets set in the WEEE directive. Given these new technologies recycled plastics start to get accepted for high tech applications. The environmental balance is suggesting that material recycling should be preferred over thermal recovery in order to reduce both energy consumption and emission of greenhouse gases, as this article will show. The economic viability of any electronic equipment plastic recycler’s business is based on finding sources of raw material, employing economical plastics recovery methods, meeting property requirements, developing markets for the products, and selling the plastics. Recycling campaigns, governmental mandates/regulations, and material restrictions (e.g. very low allowable levels of heavy metals and other substances) have brought new opportunities and challenges to plastics recyclers. Understanding their impact upon the evolution of the plastics recycling industry is important to policy makers, manufacturers, recyclers, and consumers. Over the past 12 years, MBA Polymers, Inc. has developed a unique process to recycle plastics from E-Waste. MBA Polymers has now installed a processing capacity of over 80,000 metric tons per year of highly mixed plastic-rich streams from a wide

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Paper on the recycling of tech plastics for the re-cast of the WEEE Directive

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Page 1: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 1

Electronic Equipment: Plastics Recycling.

- material recovery vs. energy recovery-

Chris Slijkhuis, Dr. Darren F. Arola, Dr. Brian L. Riise, and Dr. Michael B. Biddle

MBA Polymers, Wirtschaftspark, A-3331 Kematen/Ybbs

Tel: +43-7476-77488 Mobile: +43-664-357 15 22

Email: [email protected] Web: www.mbapolymers.at

Plastic recycling from durable products such as End-of Life Electronic equipment

is new and finally technologically possible. Recycling these plastics is vital to reach the

targets set in the WEEE directive. Given these new technologies recycled plastics start to

get accepted for high tech applications. The environmental balance is suggesting that

material recycling should be preferred over thermal recovery in order to reduce both

energy consumption and emission of greenhouse gases, as this article will show.

The economic viability of any electronic equipment plastic recycler’s business is

based on finding sources of raw material, employing economical plastics recovery

methods, meeting property requirements, developing markets for the products, and

selling the plastics. Recycling campaigns, governmental mandates/regulations, and

material restrictions (e.g. very

low allowable levels of heavy

metals and other substances) have

brought new opportunities and

challenges to plastics recyclers.

Understanding their impact upon

the evolution of the plastics

recycling industry is important to

policy makers, manufacturers,

recyclers, and consumers.

Over the past 12 years, MBA Polymers, Inc. has developed a unique process to

recycle plastics from E-Waste. MBA Polymers has now installed a processing capacity

of over 80,000 metric tons per year of highly mixed plastic-rich streams from a wide

Page 2: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 2

variety of post-consumer E-Waste feed-stocks and this capacity is likely to grow in the

next few years. These plastics rich E-waste feed stocks are recycled and recovered

plastics can be used into new durable plastics with characteristics comparable to virgin.

These products are used as raw material for new electronics, automotive and other

durable products. Manufacturers are eager to use these recycled plastics for two reasons:

a) they are typically sold to customers at prices considerably lower than virgin prices,

helping make these industries be more competitive and b) the manufacturers can develop

“Green Marketing” or “Close the Loop” marketing campaigns and this is becoming a

significant marketing point for many manufacturers.

MBA’s 12-year development and more recent world-scale commercial experience

have provided the company with a unique and valuable perspective on the challenges and

opportunities in this industry.

This paper will provide information on electronic equipment recycling

developments over the past few years, and how these developments have impacted

plastics recyclers such as MBA Polymers. The primary objective of this paper is to

emphasize the fact that incinerating waste plastics from durable products results in the

loss of an enormous amount of energy that was originally added in order to create

complex polymer chains from crude oil. The paper therefore urges the regulatory bodies

of the EU to give clear preference to recycling these plastics for material recovery over

incineration of these materials for energy recovery.

Introduction

Plastics’ recycling is beneficial for both economic and environmental reasons.

Table 1 is a comparison between virgin resin manufacturing plants and plastic recycling

plants (modeled after MBA’s automated, mechanical recycling approach) which

summarizes some of the economic and environmental benefits of recycling. Although the

specific methodology of the techniques used would influence the specific energy and/or

water consumption of a recycling plant they are, in general, significantly more

environmentally friendly than virgin plastic manufacture.

Page 3: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 3

Plastics recycling plants can be much smaller than traditional plastics

manufacturing plants. They are also more flexible since they can be used to recover a

wide variety of plastics with relatively minor changes to the process.

Plastics recycling plants using automated, mechanical recycling technologies

consume less energy, raw materials, and water, and also have less air emissions than

traditional plastics manufacture. The energy and raw materials saved by manufacturing

recycled plastics instead of virgin plastic reduces the emissions of CO2 by two-to-three

kg per kg of plastic produced. The Association of Plastics Manufacturers in Europe

(APME) provides eco-profiles for a number of plastics that are used in the manufacture

of electronic equipment1. It is evident, from analyzing these eco-profiles, that recycling

plastics can conserve natural resources that would otherwise be used in the manufacture

of virgin plastics.

Page 4: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 4

Table 1. Comparisons Between Virgin and Recycled Plastics Production Plants

There are plentiful supplies of scrap plastic and a large demand for plastics in

electronic equipment manufacture.

The Western European consumption of plastics is in the order of 40 million

metric tons (2003) and it is expected that the WEEE directive will result in more than

400000 metric tons of plastics that, until the implementation of the WEEE directive took

place, were mostly land filled. One can see that recovering plastics from post-consumer

durable goods sources is an excellent opportunity given this newly developed technology

for recovery of waste plastics from durable products. It will largely contribute to

reaching the recycling targets set forward by the WEEE Directive.

Sourcing

With the delayed implementation of the WEEE directive into implemented

legislation in a significant number of European States6 the recycling infrastructure to date

is still developing. MBA Polymers is already recycling plastics from many of the

electronics recyclers that have emerged. MBA also recycles plastics from major

electronics recyclers in North America, Japan and China. Compared to some Asian7 and

American8 countries, there are many different approaches to post-consumer electronic

Chemical Plants Automated Recycling Plants

Plant Costs High Low

Process Costs Moderate Lowest Raw Material Petrochemicals Scrap plastics Raw Material Cost Medium to High Low Process Chemical Mechanical Electric Usage Between 50 and 100 MJ/kg 2 Less than 5 MJ/kg Water Usage 0.18 cu meters/kg 3 Less than 1% of virgin 4 Global Warming: Greenhouse Gas Savings

For every kg of virgin plastic replaced by a kg of recycled plastic from MBA, 2-3 kg of CO2 emissions are avoided 5

Input-Output flexibility Almost None High

Page 5: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 5

equipment recycling that have developed. The specific approach to recycling can vary by

region and it often focuses on the take back and the primary recyclers.

The primary recycler is an organization that sources whole units and, in most

cases, is the supplier of post-consumer plastics to secondary recyclers. Primary recyclers

are typically responsible for removing hazardous components from the units (e.g. cathode

ray tubes), and may also be involved with the recovery of usable parts or with some

segregation of other materials (e.g. metal recovery). The type and physical form of

plastics emanating from these organizations can vary from a narrow range of business

equipment units being recycled under contract to a highly mixed stream of business

equipment resulting from consumer take-back.

The location and specific focus of the primary recycler has a large impact on the

types of plastics that are available. Recyclers within non-manufacturing communities or

high population densities will tend to have more mixed items from consumers unless they

are supplied by nearby manufacturers that are engaged in take-back and part re-use

programs. Manufacturers themselves may also perform their own take-back and

recycling of both pre-consumer and post-consumer units. Recyclers within

Page 6: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 6

manufacturing environments may

add pre-consumer items or other

mixed plastics from plastic

molders and assemblers to their

incoming streams.

The physical form of the

plastic material can be influenced by both the focus and size of the primary recycler.

Organizations having limited space or smaller volume contracts are less apt to install

highly developed and automated metal removal systems, however it is clear to MBA that

the majority of WEEE recyclers are using a shredding approach, after decontamination,

much like the automotive recycling industry to size reduce and liberate the metals so they

can be recovered using automated equipment, such as magnets and eddy current

separators. This results in plastics-rich streams of highly mixed materials:

• Different types and grades of plastics

• Residual metals missed by the metals recyclers

• Wood, cardboard, textiles, foam, glass, etc.

MBA recovers the majority of the plastics from these “shredder residues”. It also

recovers the metals missed by the metal recyclers because the final plastics products may

not contain metal. The material recycling rate is thus not only increased by the recovering

of the plastics, it is also increased due to the higher metal recycling rate from WEEE.

Processing

European labor rates limit the amount of manual processing or sorting that can be

economically accomplished with commingled plastic streams. In addition, these

subjective methods of separation can be compromised when like-pigmented and small

particle-sized material is encountered (i.e. commingled granulated plastics). Automated

plastic sorting methods can provide accurate separations and minimize labor costs,

although there are direct costs associated with the installation of automated equipment.

These costs also affect plant volumes needed to achieve economic viability. Recyclers,

whether or not they employ manual or automated sorting technologies, work towards

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Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 7

securing streams of mixed plastics that enable economic viability based upon their

processing methodology.

Although it has been shown that there are a finite number of plastic resins within

electronic business equipment plastic streams9, there are many grades of plastics within

the same resin family that exist which may inhibit recovery, affect recovery yields, or

impact the marketability of the recovered resin(s). For example, there can be grades of

plastic that have different mechanical and melt flow properties, contain different types

and levels of flame retardants, contain different pigments that may limit the range of

product colors, or have paints/coatings that can influence the surface appearance or

mechanical properties of the recycled plastic. Furthermore, there can be many non-

plastics items within these streams that also impact the recovery of targeted plastics.

Items such as wood, rubber, glass, circuit boards, dirt, and packaging material (plastic

wrap and cardboard) are a few of the items commonly encountered when processing

shredded streams of post-consumer plastics. The purity, or “cleanliness” of any recycled

plastic stream is common language used to describe the quality of recovered plastics,

although it may not fully characterize the applicability of the material for an application.

All of these factors must be considered when recovering plastics from electronic

equipment. Processes for recovering high value plastics must therefore contain robust

methods for removing non-plastic materials, plastic-plastic separation methods, and even

methods for separating different grades of a given plastic type. These processes are now

available and operating on a large-scale in Europe, China and North America.

Page 8: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 8

Application Development

If the end goal is to put the plastic resin into high-end applications, similar to the

original parts from which the resins were derived, then rigorous quality standards must be

achieved. These quality standards are similar to those required of virgin plastics and

include minimum physical properties, color, material consistency, UL recognition, and

requirements for low levels of certain

chemical compounds in the material.

Low-end applications may be

appropriate channels for materials

unable to meet the quality standards

or for which the recovery costs

exceed current market pricing.

Physical properties such as the

notched Charpy impact strength (ISO

179), tensile strength (ISO 527), melt

flow rate (ISO 1133), and temperature

of deflection under load (ISO 75) are

commonly used to describe the

processibility and mechanical

properties of plastic materials, so

specifications for a given molded part

often require that the plastic’s

properties meets minimum values for

some or all of these properties. Once it is determined that the plastic meets these general

property requirements, product testing is often used as a more definitive measure that the

material is suitable for the intended application.

The color and appearance is a special consideration for recycled plastic when it is

specified for a given part. Unlike virgin plastics, which initially do not contain pigments,

recycled plastics are derived from mixtures of materials that may contain a wide range of

pigment types and loadings. Even if colorsorting processes are employed, recycled

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plastics are typically some shade of off-white, gray or black with a narrower range of

economically and technically feasible final product colors. Recycled plastics may also

contain discolorations or specks that are detrimental to the appearance and may therefore

limit their range of applications. Paint and coatings can be used to overcome colorability

constraints, although the recyclability of the painted and/or coated part may be

compromised with this approach. There are several methods of dealing with potential

appearance issues: a) about 60% of the plastics used in automobiles are black and this is a

huge market for recycled plastics, b) there are numerous non-appearance applications in

computers and electronics and other markets, c) co-extrusion and co-injection molding

have been used to place a virgin “cap layer” on parts – and all different colored parts

have been made with up to 70% gray and black recycled plastics in the interior, d) color

sorting of the plastic before extrusion does give some ability to produce recycled

materials that can be compounded with pigment packages to achieve a different color, e)

as with “speckled” recycled paper, some plastic part designers have actually tried to

accentuate any appearance variations to advertise the recycled content.

Material consistency is another requirement of both virgin and recycled plastics.

The difficulty of controlling a wide range of variables in the polymerization process

(temperatures and several concentrations) leads to variability in properties between

batches of virgin plastics. Post-consumer plastics recovered from electronic equipment,

on the other hand, contain plastic grades from various suppliers manufactured over

multiple years. Perhaps counterintuitive to those not familiar with large-scale plastics

recycling, the averaging of all of these batches and grades can result in recycled plastics

being as consistent as virgin plastics.

High end applications such as electronics also require UL recognition for the

plastics. The UL recognition process for recycled plastics is more rigorous than for

virgin plastics, although MBA Polymers currently has two UL recognized products.

Plastics must also meet certain compositional requirements based on the RoHS

Directive. Various additives that are no longer in use may reappear in post-consumer

plastic streams that have been recovered from electronic equipment. Today, such

additives include certain flame retardants as well as heavy metals (e.g. Cadmium) that

were once commonly found in certain pigments. Certain families of brominated flame

Page 10: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 10

retardants have been prohibited from being used in new electronic equipment in some

parts of the world and by some manufacturers. Due to the potential for electronic

equipment containing these flame retardants reaching the recycling stream, restrictions in

Europe allow up to 0.1% by weight of these flame retardants in finished electronics

products10. The technology MBA Polymers has developed ensures that the final products

can meet these requirements and tests are available to ensure compliance with these

standards.

Sales

Once marketing and application development hurdles are surmounted, the

material can be sold into targeted applications. Here, though, available volumes of

recycled plastic can become a concern. Manufacturers are weary about spending the time

and effort to qualify new resins into applications without the supplier being able to

produce substantial volumes, and plastic recyclers cannot afford to produce these

volumes until purchase commitments are made and sources of feed material are secured.

This is often described as the “chicken and egg” problem of the recycling

industry.

Page 11: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 11

The actual sales price of post-consumer plastic can range from that of post-

industrial sources to the price of virgin11. MBA has proven that post-consumer plastics

can perform as well as virgin plastics in a number of applications. However, current

procurement practices are aimed at reducing material costs to be competitive in a global

economy so, without regulations mandating the use of recycled content in new electronic

equipment, manufacturers are primarily incentivized to use recycle plastics based upon

cost savings. Although cost is often the major issue motivating the purchase of recycled

plastic, MBA Polymers has experienced a few instances where the desire to be “green”

has outweighed price points.

Conclusions

The amount of post-consumer plastics from WEEE, available for plastics

recovery is on the rise due to the WEEE legislation implementation, conscious efforts to

avoid landfilling, and the recognition that there exists viable business opportunities.

Plastics can be now technologically be recovered to provide both environmental and

economic benefits to society.

Plastics recovery from post-consumer electronic equipment is complex. In the

absence of a wide recycling infrastructure there are still logistical issues. Purifying target

plastic(s) within a commingled, post-consumer stream have until recently presented

technical obstacles. With the advent of developing automated, mechanical recycling

technologies, the ability to recover plastics has largely improved.

Once the targeted plastic(s) are recovered, the plastic must be characterized and,

in some cases, modified via extrusion compounding, in order to meet physical property

requirements defined by the part design.

Sales of recycled plastics start to get acceptance and credibility for high tech

applications.

Page 12: Mba Eu Paper Final

Kematen/Ybbs, Austria – August 11th 2006. 12

The environmental balance is clear. Virgin plastics require 900 liters of oil and

14000 kWh of energy to create one metric ton, whilst the same amount of plastics with

similar characteristics can be produced requiring 2 metric tons of plastics from E-Waste

and only 950 kWh. Material recycling therefore should be preferred over thermal

recycling, which besides “wasting” this valuable resource, might result in the emission of

undesirable byproducts from the thermal recovery process. 1 APME website: www.apme.org. 2 Calculations from the plastics industry and the US EPA. Higher number includes “feedstock” energy cost of crude oil starting material. 3 LCA (Life-Cycle Assessment) studies from APME (Association of Plastics Manufacturers in Europe) – virgin plants use approximately 40 times as much water to produce the same amount of plastic as an MBA plant. 4 From MBA operating experience with its plants in Europe (Austria), Asia (China) and the USA. 5 From US EPA and other sources. 6 European Union website http://europa.eu.int/scadplus/leg/en/lvb/l21210.htm. 7 Japan Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry website http://www.meti.go.jp/english/policy/index_environment.html. 8 States including, but not limited to: CA, FL, NJ, NY, ME, MI, MN, WI, MA, SC, and RI. 9 M. Fisher and T. Kingsbury, An Industry Full of Potential: Ten Facts to Know about Plastics from Consumer Electronics – 2003 update. American Plastics Council. 10 California SB20, European Union RoHS Directive, and Federal Electronics Challenge Recommended Criteria to address environmental performance of electronic products. 11 Plastic News resin pricing chart.