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Airnov to showcase its range of healthcare packaging solutions to Indian market at Innopack Pharma Confex

Airnov to showcase its range of healthcare packaging solutions to Indian market at Innopack Pharma Confex

  • Large range of industry-leading and sustainable solutions are available to pharmaceutical packaging producers
  • Airnov’s laser-marked canisters, rimless packets, washers, EQius™ and vials will be exhibited at key industry event
  • Innopack Pharma Confex to be held in Mumbai on June 9-10, 2022

    Airnov Healthcare Packaging, a global leader in controlled atmosphere packaging, will be presenting a large portfolio of solutions available to customers in India at the upcoming Innopack Pharma Confex, scheduled to take place in Mumbai on June 9-10.

Now in its 11th edition, the event is India’s largest gathering of pharmaceutical packaging stakeholders, with this year’s theme being ‘Innovation and Sustainability paving the Way Forward’.

Airnov has been at the forefront of sustainable healthcare packaging innovation for many years.

At the event, the company will be showcasing a wide range of products, many of which offering sustainability gains to packaging producers.

These include sustainable rimless packets which are welded together using uncoated Tyvek® and offer greater moisture absorbing capacity, while at the same time cutting raw materials usage by 25%. Meanwhile, Airnov’s laser-marked desiccant canisters reduce risk of contamination while eliminating the need for print and paper labels.

“Most of our product developments and innovations are geared towards sustainability activities, and we are excited to be demonstrating some of those innovations at the upcoming Innopack event in Mumbai,” comments Shrikar Trikannad, Airnov’s Head of Sales for India.

Also being showcased at Innopack are a range of desiccant washers and EQius™ Equilibrium RH Stabilizers, the latter being sorbent products which maintain a specific moisture level in pharmaceutical packaging.

Visitors to Innopack will additionally be able to explore Airnov’s latest innovation in its vial range of products in the form of HAT®-IN, designed to protect diagnostic and nutraceutical products. The vial, which is easily integrated into automated filling lines, utilizes and integrates the company’s advanced desiccant polymer (ADP) technology to provide a high moisture barrier, as well as excellent moisture adsorption.

“We are also excited to showcase our Aroma-Can® canisters,” added Nicolas Martinez, Product Manager at Airnov. “These employ aroma technology to add an aromatic sensory experience, either to mask unwanted odors or enhance a product’s natural aroma”

Our team will be on hand at Innopack and ready to answer any questions about this and all of our solutions.

Trinohex® Ultra LIB electrolyte additive now available in EU

Ascend Performance Materials’ Trinohex® Ultra is now REACH-registered and available across the European Union.

“The demand for safe, reliable and longer-lasting batteries will only increase as we continue to shift toward e-mobility and renewable energy,” said Dave McNeece, sustainable specialties senior business manager at Ascend. “In many ways, Europe is at the forefront of adopting these technologies and we can now support lithium-ion battery innovation and production with Trinohex Ultra.”

In third-party testing, Trinohex Ultra has demonstrated superior cathode protection across cathode and electrolyte chemistries. This protection leads to a 30% reduction in harmful gas generation and longer-lasting performance, especially in extreme conditions.

“Trinohex Ultra solves many of the challenges with lithium-ion batteries,” said Mr.McNeece. “Improved safety accelerates adoption and longer-lasting performance reduces harmful waste as the industry explores effective recycling options. Also, its effectiveness across chemistries potentially reduces the reliance on constrained resources.”

Trinohex Ultra is manufactured on world-scale assets and readily available globally.

Toward customizable timber, grown in a lab

Each year, the world loses about 10 million hectares of forest — an area about the size of Iceland — because of deforestation. At that rate, some scientists predict the world’s forests could disappear in 100 to 200 years.

In an effort to provide an environmentally friendly and low-waste alternative, researchers at MIT have pioneered a tunable technique to generate wood-like plant material in a lab, which could enable someone to “grow” a wooden product like a table without needing to cut down trees, process lumber, etc.

These researchers have now demonstrated that, by adjusting certain chemicals used during the growth process, they can precisely control the physical and mechanical properties of the resulting plant material, such as its stiffness and density.

They also show that, using 3D bioprinting techniques, they can grow plant material in shapes, sizes, and forms that are not found in nature and that can’t be easily produced using traditional agricultural methods.

“The idea is that you can grow these plant materials in exactly the shape that you need, so you don’t need to do any subtractive manufacturing after the fact, which reduces the amount of energy and waste. There is a lot of potential to expand this and grow three-dimensional structures,” says lead author Ashley Beckwith, a recent PhD graduate.

Though still in its early days, this research demonstrates that lab-grown plant materials can be tuned to have specific characteristics, which could someday enable researchers to grow wood products with the exact features needed for a particular application, like high strength to support the walls of a house or certain thermal properties to more efficiently heat a room, explains senior author Luis Fernando Velásquez-García, a principal scientist in MIT’s Microsystems Technology Laboratories.

To begin the process of growing plant material in the lab, the researchers first isolate cells from the leaves of young Zinnia elegans plants. The cells are cultured in liquid medium for two days, then transferred to a gel-based medium, which contains nutrients and two different hormones.

Adjusting the hormone levels at this stage in the process enables researchers to tune the physical and mechanical properties of the plant cells that grow in that nutrient-rich broth.

“In the human body, you have hormones that determine how your cells develop and how certain traits emerge. In the same way, by changing the hormone concentrations in the nutrient broth, the plant cells respond differently. Just by manipulating these tiny chemical quantities, we can elicit pretty dramatic changes in terms of the physical outcomes,” Beckwith says.

In a way, these growing plant cells behave almost like stem cells — researchers can give them cues to tell them what to become, Velásquez-García adds.

They use a 3D printer to extrude the cell culture gel solution into a specific structure in a petri dish, and let it incubate in the dark for three months. Even with this incubation period, the researchers’ process is about two orders of magnitude faster than the time it takes for a tree to grow to maturity, Velásquez-García says.

Following incubation, the resulting cell-based material is dehydrated, and then the researchers evaluate its properties.

They found that lower hormone levels yielded plant materials with more rounded, open cells that have lower density, while higher hormone levels led to the growth of plant materials with smaller, denser cell structures. Higher hormone levels also yielded plant material that was stiffer; the researchers were able to grow plant material with a storage modulus (stiffness) similar to that of some natural woods.

Another goal of this work is to study what is known as lignification in these lab-grown plant materials. Lignin is a polymer that is deposited in the cell walls of plants which makes them rigid and woody. They found that higher hormone levels in the growth medium causes more lignification, which would lead to plant material with more wood-like properties.

The researchers also demonstrated that, using a 3D bioprinting process, the plant material can be grown in a custom shape and size. Rather than using a mold, the process involves the use of a customizable computer-aided design file that is fed to a 3D bioprinter, which deposits the cell gel culture into a specific shape. For instance, they were able to grow plant material in the shape of a tiny evergreen tree.

Research of this kind is relatively new, Borenstein says.

“This work demonstrates the power that a technology at the interface between engineering and biology can bring to bear on an environmental challenge, leveraging advances originally developed for health care applications,” he adds.

The researchers also show that the cell cultures can survive and continue to grow for months after printing, and that using a thicker gel to produce thicker plant material structures does not impact the survival rate of the lab-grown cells.

“I think the real opportunity here is to be optimal with what you use and how you use it. If you want to create an object that is going to serve some purpose, there are mechanical expectations to consider. This process is really amenable to customization,” Velásquez-García says.

Now that they have demonstrated the effective tunability of this technique, the researchers want to continue experimenting so they can better understand and control cellular development. They also want to explore how other chemical and genetic factors can direct the growth of the cells.

They hope to evaluate how their method could be transferred to a new species. Zinnia plants don’t produce wood, but if this method were used to make a commercially important tree species, like pine, the process would need to be tailored to that species, Velásquez-García says.

Ultimately, he is hopeful this work can help to motivate other groups to dive into this area of research to help reduce deforestation.

“Trees and forests are an amazing tool for helping us manage climate change, so being as strategic as we can with these resources will be a societal necessity going forward,” Beckwith adds.

https://web.mit.edu/

Airnov to showcase its range of healthcare packaging solutions to Indian market at Innopack Pharma Confex

Airnov to showcase its range of healthcare packaging solutions to Indian market at Innopack Pharma Confex

  • Large range of industry-leading and sustainable solutions are available to pharmaceutical packaging producers
  • Airnov’s laser-marked canisters, rimless packets, washers, EQius™ and vials will be exhibited at key industry event
  • Innopack Pharma Confex to be held in Mumbai on June 9-10, 2022

Airnov Healthcare Packaging, a global leader in controlled atmosphere packaging, will be presenting a large portfolio of solutions available to customers in India at the upcoming Innopack Pharma Confex, scheduled to take place in Mumbai on June 9-10.

Now in its 11th edition, the event is India’s largest gathering of pharmaceutical packaging stakeholders, with this year’s theme being ‘Innovation and Sustainability paving the Way Forward’.

Airnov has been at the forefront of sustainable healthcare packaging innovation for many years.

At the event, the company will be showcasing a wide range of products, many of which offering sustainability gains to packaging producers.

These include sustainable rimless packets which are welded together using uncoated Tyvek® and offer greater moisture absorbing capacity, while at the same time cutting raw materials usage by 25%. Meanwhile, Airnov’s laser-marked desiccant canisters reduce risk of contamination while eliminating the need for print and paper labels.

“Most of our product developments and innovations are geared towards sustainability activities, and we are excited to be demonstrating some of those innovations at the upcoming Innopack event in Mumbai,” comments Shrikar Trikannad, Airnov’s Head of Sales for India.

Also being showcased at Innopack are a range of desiccant washers and EQius™ Equilibrium RH Stabilizers, the latter being sorbent products which maintain a specific moisture level in pharmaceutical packaging.

Visitors to Innopack will additionally be able to explore Airnov’s latest innovation in its vial range of products in the form of HAT®-IN, designed to protect diagnostic and nutraceutical products. The vial, which is easily integrated into automated filling lines, utilizes and integrates the company’s advanced desiccant polymer (ADP) technology to provide a high moisture barrier, as well as excellent moisture adsorption.

“We are also excited to showcase our Aroma-Can® canisters,” added Nicolas Martinez, Product Manager at Airnov. “These employ aroma technology to add an aromatic sensory experience, either to mask unwanted odors or enhance a product’s natural aroma”

In the circular economy, we generate impulses for each other

Interview with Jan Hendrik Ostgathe, Managing Director of Kreyenborg GmbH & Co. KG

Mr. Ostgathe, how has the circular economy developed in recent years?
A great deal of things have been set in motion. As a family business, we have been associated with the plastics industry for decades. Until a few years ago, recycling only played a minor role for many companies, but that has now changed. Market players who used to pay less attention to recycling are jumping on the bandwagon. We are also seeing major extruder manufacturers who were previously less associated with recycling now starting to offer recycling equipment, indicating a clear a trend towards recycling. At Kreyenborg, we register increased demand for our machines from the recycling industry. At the latest since the K 2019, which can be seen as the starting signal for the recycling economy, this demand has seen a linear increase.

Who are the drivers?
We all drive each other in the circular economy. In recent years, consumers have developed a completely different awareness in the face of climate change and the identified finite nature of resources. Major brand owners are responding to this, and many now want to go green themselves and take on a pioneering role. Machine manufacturers are also drivers, because they provide the machines that make recycling possible in the first place. The market is also a driver. If raw plastics become expensive to produce, this can provide an economic advantage for recycled materials. And, of course, legislative bodies are also providing an impetus by stipulating that a certain value stream must be recycled. It’s all interlinked. A dynamic has now been created within which all participants are inspiring and encouraging one another. I think this is the right way to go.

What significance does information have in this process?
It is enormously important. Everyone must know what is right and what needs to be done. And this is where things are often still lacking. For example, an organic label advertises with outer packaging made of recycled paper. But on the inside, this paper is coated with plastic. Consumers who are not aware that this packaging is virtually impossible to recycle, or can only be recycled at great expense, will have the feeling that they’ve done something positive for the environment. But the opposite is the case.

At the beginning of the circular economy, recyclates were of poor quality, but initially it was all about getting started. Now the focus is on quality. What contribution is Kreyenborg making in this regard?
To improve the quality of recyclates, we have developed two new methods for our reprocessing machines. The first one, IR-CLEAN, is an additional cleaning process that removes contaminants from PET. In the end, one hundred percent of the PET recyclates treated in this way can be used again for food packaging. Demand for this product has risen sharply in recent years. The second method, IR-FRESH, which is still very new, involves removing unpleasant odours from HDPE packaging, such as shampoo bottles. In both processes, we work very efficiently with infrared light as an energy source. Both are very good solutions for eliminating odours and contamination once the value streams have reached a stage where they can also be sorted.

Where do you still see barriers for the circular economy?
The availability of material streams is still insufficient, which is putting the brakes on the process just as much as the fact that the purity of material type is still largely lacking. This is difficult to achieve because there are a large number of different recyclates, plastic combinations in a product or contamination through printing inks. So-called multi-layer packaging is difficult to recycle because it combines different plastics with different properties. We should think about establishing separate deposit systems for different plastics, comparable to the one for PET bottles. As long as this does not exist and no sorting purity is achieved, recycling will be difficult.

Germany is more advanced in the circular economy than other countries. How can it be set up elsewhere?
We are already discussing technical solutions here on how we can represent value streams; no one else is that far advanced. In South America, for example, there is no deposit system for PET bottles. Here, people collect PET bottles in the streets and sell the material to the processors. There’s almost more recycling here than in many other industrialised countries. And that’s only because they make money from it. That’s the key to the whole thing. You have to be able to make money with recycling. Virgin material is still too cheap in many parts of the world. Manufacturers and consumers are too careless with plastic because, in some cases, it just doesn’t hurt cost-wise. We don’t need a lot of regulation, what we need are tangible incentives for manufacturers and consumers to use single-variety and therefore recycling-friendly packaging solutions. In addition, however, there must be even more incentives to ensure that these packaging solutions can be realised with recycled plastics. There must be monetary control. Ultimately, it must become more expensive for all of us to simply throw away the recyclable material plastic. Resources are finite.

A big anniversary: 40 years of the Arburg Technology Center in Radevormwald

A big anniversary: 40 years of the Arburg Technology Center in Radevormwald

The first Arburg Technology Center (ATC) – then known as the Info Center – opened in Radevormwald in 1982. This was and remains a sought-after contact point for customers from all over northern and western Germany – and is also considered a model for the international Arburg organisations established over the following years. On 19 and 20 May 2022, the 40th anniversary of ATC Radevormwald was duly celebrated in the presence of Managing Partners Juliane and Michael Hehl and Managing Director Technology and Engineering, Guido Frohnhaus. The exclusive anniversary event and the open day were each attended by around 160 enthusiastic guests…..

Ampacet SunChill Color Masterbatch Reduces Heat Build-up in Dark Plastics Exposed to Sunlight

Ampacet SunChill Color Masterbatch Reduces Heat Build-up in Dark Plastics Exposed to Sunlight

Ampacet, a global masterbatch leader,  has introduced SunChill™ color masterbatches designed to decrease the thermal load of dark plastic items exposed to sunlight and hot weather conditions.

Dark-colored plastics are known to heat up when exposed to sunlight because dark pigments absorb most of the infrared wavelengths and convert them into heat energy.  The darker the color, the warmer the plastic item becomes when exposed to the sunlight, with black being the ultimate heat absorber.  Widely used for outdoor applications, such as floor tiles,  construction products and furniture, dark plastics can become uncomfortably hot for use by consumers when left out in the sun.

When used to color dark outdoor plastic items,  Ampacet SunChill exhibits much lower infrared wavelength absorption and limits heat build-up of plastics exposed to the sun when compared to conventional color solutions.  As a result, colored articles remain cooler and more comfortable to touch during hot periods of the year.

https://www.ampacet.com/

Covestro launches a new production line for Desmodur® 15 prepolymers

Covestro launches a new production line for Desmodur® 15 prepolymers

Covestro launches the production of Desmodur® 15 prepolymers at its Spanish site of Barcelona. With this new production line, the company addresses the growing demand for its high-performance elastomers and can serve an ever wider range of very demanding applications.

 

“With this strategic investment, Covestro aims to further enlarge the capacity and improve the reliability of its global supply of Desmodur® 15 based products,” says Philip Bahke, Head of Operations at Covestro Elastomers.

 

“On top of addressing our customers’ demand, Covestro’s Barcelona site has been operating entirely on renewable energy since the beginning of 2022,” says Sucheta Govil, Chief Commercial Officer at Covestro. “This approach is part of our ambition to reduce our environmental impact while offering our customers greater access to our solutions and specialties products.”

 

“We are opening the new production unit for our Desmodur® 15 prepolymers in Barcelona in parallel to the ongoing expansion of our NDI capacities in the Asia-Pacific region with the Map Ta Phut plant in Thailand,” explains Thomas Braig, Head of Covestro Elastomers. “This new production unit will help us to support our customers’ growth in the cast polyurethanes high-end applications segment.” The abbreviation NDI stands for naphthylene diisocyanate.

 

“Thanks to this new production line, our Vulkollan® licensees, as Desmodur® 15 prepolymers processors, will be able to further develop their business,” explains Abdel Arhzaf, Head of NDI-Vulkollan®. “Through these investments, we intend to support the demand for ultra-high-performance elastomers used for superior applications as e.g. in the material handling industry and also for a growing number of engineering applications.”

 

Combining the highest mechanical characteristics with dynamic load-bearing capacity, elastomers based on Desmodur® 15 prepolymers are not only one of the most powerful cast polyurethanes in the market, they are also as easy to process as conventional prepolymers.

The green wave for the steel industry

wire and Tube in June: Exhibitors present sustainable solutions on the way to the Green Transformation
The steel industry is already working on nothing less than a historic technological transformation. Direct reduction based on hydrogen will replace the conventional production method as a clean production process – and experts agree with this. Steel production based on carbon will lose its place at the top.

The steel industry has the target to reduce emissions by around 30 percent by 2030. A development that the wire, cable and tube industries are also paying close attention to. For them, climate-friendly steel as the basis for their products is also an important aspect when it comes to being environmentally friendly and competitive. The green transformation covers all industrial sectors – from suppliers to users.

The European steel industry is responsible for 5.7 percent of the total greenhouse gas emissions in the European Union – which means that reducing emissions is a mammoth task. By 2050, it must be producing in a climate-neutral manner. This is stipulated in the Paris Climate Agreement of 2015. But the steel industry has already got off to a strong start.
thyssenkrupp
thyssenkrupp Uhde Chlorine Engineers will manufacture a 200 MW electrolysis plant based on its 20 MW large module for alkaline water electrolysis. Photo: thyssenkrupp

The steel industry is setting the course
thyssenkrupp Steel is a shining example of this. “If production is converted to climate-neutral steel by 2045 at the latest, we will be the largest single European consumer of CO2-neutral hydrogen”, says Dr Arnd Köfler, Chief Technology Officer (CTO), with confidence. In principle, the steel industry will be one of the main consumers of green hydrogen. What in turn shows they are leading the way when establishing hydrogen technologies as the key to decarbonisation.

thyssenkrupp Steel aims to save 30 percent CO2 in this decade alone. To achieve this, four blast furnaces will be gradually replaced by direct reduction plants operated with green hydrogen from 2025, each supplemented by smelting units, in order to turn the solid raw material into liquid pig iron. According to thyssenkrupp, two billion euros will be needed for implementation by 2030, and up to eight billion euros in investments will be needed for the complete transformation.
Salzgitter AG
The GrInHy2.0 project team in front of the electrolysis plant in the Salzgitter steelworks. Photo: Salzgitter AG

Decarbonisation cooperation
Salzgitter AG has also initiated the decarbonisation of its processes and products. It plans to start production of low-carbon on a new production route from the end of 2025. “The expected CO2 saving after completion of the transformation will be more than 95 percent”, the company explains.

Salzgitter is entering into cooperation to push forward decarbonisation. The Group has entered into an agreement with Uniper to create the SALCOS® project, which is part of the ‘Salzgitter AG 2030’ strategy. This project is to be supplied with green hydrogen for the production of climate-friendly steel by the international energy company Uniper. SALCOS® (Salzgitter Low Co₂ Steelmaking) is a transformation programme to convert production to a hydrogen-based route.

In Wilhelmshaven, Uniper is developing two projects with green hydrogen. Here, the company is planning an import terminal that converts ammonia back into hydrogen. In addition, large-scale electrolysis is provided, which will generate green hydrogen with an output of up to 1,000 MW. For this purpose, a direct connection of new offshore wind farms to be built in the North Sea will be examined.

Low-carbon steel for the automotive industry
Salzgitter has already agreed with Volkswagen AG to supply low-carbon steel from the end of 2025. Volkswagen plans to use this steel in future projects such as the Trinity 1 e-model. The automobile group wants to focus on reducing CO2 emissions where they are primarily generated, i.e. during automotive production. “In addition to the battery-powered electric powertrain and aluminium components, this is especially the case with steel”, the Group explains. For Volkswagen, the reduction of CO2 emissions in the supply chain “is a central component in order to gradually become a mobility provider with a neutral CO2 balance by 2050, as part of the Group’s goTOzero strategy”.

In addition, a closed recycling cycle for steel is to be set up between Volkswagen’s parent plant in Wolfsburg and the integrated smelter plant in Salzgitter. Volkswagen is again making the steel remnants of the production available to Salzgitter AG, which melts them down, processes them into new steel products and delivers them to Wolfsburg for car production.
AcelorMittal
ArcelorMittal has successfully tested the use of green hydrogen in the production of direct reduced iron (DRI) at its steelworks in Contrecoeur, Quebec. Photo: ArcelorMittal

Expansion of hydrogen infrastructure
ArcelorMittal aims to achieve carbon-neutral steel production at its European sites by 2050 and to reduce emissions by 30 percent by 2030. “The German flat steel sites in Bremen and Eisenhüttenstadt are fully integrated into the Group’s strategy on climate neutrality”, the company explains. Two blast furnaces will be converted at the sites in order to blow in natural gas and reduce CO₂ emissions. With the planned expansion of the hydrogen infrastructure in Germany, ArcelorMittal intends to build a large industrial plant for the direct reduction of iron ore (DRI) in Bremen and a DRI pilot plant in Eisenhüttenstadt in combination with electric arc furnaces by 2026.

Own process gases and hydrogen
With ‘H2Syngas’, Saarstahl and Dillinger rely – together with the engineering company Paul Wurth (part of the SMS group) -, on the use of their own process gases and the use of considerable amounts of hydrogen in the blast furnace process. The corresponding pilot plant was built in cooperation with Paul Wurth.

“The new process developed by Paul Wurth – known as dry reforming – enables the conversion of the coking plant gas produced in the coking plant into a hot reducing gas or synthesis gas”, explains Saarstahl. This is enriched with hydrogen and then used as a reducing agent for the reduction of the iron ores. The injection of the hot reducing gas into the blast furnace “leads to a considerable reduction in coke consumption and thus to a reduction in CO₂ emissions”.

The green transformation is also digital
The green transformation has already begun and is setting itself high targets – but it needs digital support. According to the ifo Institute, the digital transformation of the energy industry – and ultimately the steel industry – is an integral part of the energy transition. It is one of the biggest IT projects of all time. In the future, many new and decentralised producers of renewable energy will enter the market. “These must be connected to the grid and their fluctuating production must be controlled. As a result, suppliers will have to manage large data streams, including data on feed-in or local consumption”, explains the ifo Institute. Digitisation therefore not only supports efficient production, but also a sustainable distribution of energy to steel companies. A mammoth task that must now be mastered.

he exhibitors at wire and Tube 2022 are prepared for this and will present new technological solutions from the wire, cable, tube and pipe industries at the Düsseldorf Fairgrounds from 20 to 24 June 2022. For further information, industry and company news on both trade fairs, please visit: www.wire.de and www.Tube.de.

Bio-polyolefin Market Set to Grow as Fast as Sugar Cane

Bio-polyolefin Market Set to Grow as Fast as Sugar Cane

 

Sugar cane can grow to a height of 10 feet in 12 months. Independent research by MLT Analytics (MLTA) indicates that usage of polyethylene and polypropylene derived from renewable resources such as sugar cane, non-edible plants and biogenic fats and oils has the potential to grow equally fast.

 

Bio-polyethylene market leader Braskem exported almost 150,000 tonnes of bio-PE in 2021, headed by bio-HDPE and bio-LDPDE grades, according to MLTA analysis. Further, with mass balance-based biopolymer production accelerating in Europe and Japan, the global bio-PE market will soon surpass 200,000 tonnes annually. Braskem’s recent decision to license bio-ethylene production technology in a partnership with Lummus Technology should further accelerate market growth. “Bio-based polyolefins are emerging as key enablers for plastic suppliers and brand-owners alike to reach their sustainability goals,” notes MLTA CEO Stephen Moore. Regulatory pressure is also evident. Case in point: Japan’s Green Growth Strategy Through Achieving Carbon Neutrality in 2050 targets 2 million tonnes of biomass plastics in 2030. “Leading Japanese polyolefin suppliers are already gearing up to meet these targets,” says Moore. For example, “Prime Polymer shipped its first bio-PP shipment in March this year using bio-based hydrocarbons from Neste, while parent company Mitsui Chemicals is also developing its own process technology to polymerize PP from bio-isopropanol.”While LDPE, particularly for coating of paperboard containers, and HDPE, mainly for packaging and bags, currently dominate the marketspace, bio-LLDPE and bio-EVA are also emerging sustainable options, as is bio-PP. “A key differentiator in the market going forward will be whether these offerings are indeed 100% bio-based resins or marketed using a mass balance approach,” says Moore.
https://www.mltanalytics.com/