ep.5 | How big tech is trying to fix recycling
ep.5 | How big tech is trying to fix recycling

ep.5 | How big tech is trying to fix recycling

Poppington_1Z

9 min
Business & Finance
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Description

That’s James McCall, chief sustainability officer at HP. Yes, I’m back in the desert, but this time I’m taking about ocean bound plastics. Specifically the stuff HP is using in 99 percent of its new devices. You see, plastic manufacturing is actually a bit of a scam. On 18 July 2017 the sovereign nation of the People’s Republic of China filed a notification of technical barriers to trade with the World Trade Organisation. This is a routine process and the WTO gets dozens of these a week. No stress, right? Wrong. Because the items listed under the standardized codes were all targeted at things that have polymer in its name. Namely, plastics. Pretty much all plastics cannot be sent to china for recycling. And ever since then the world has been in an arms race to make plastic recycling profitable. The uncomfortable truth of plastic recycling is that new plastic products cannot be made only out recycled plastic. The other truth is that most plastic is not easily recyclable. You know that triangle arrows with a number inside? That’s not a recycling sign, it’s a polymer ID code. South Africa only has the technical capacity to recycle three of the seven polymers within our borders. Well, to be fair we can process the others, but it gets tricky. The codes you should look out for as perfect recycling targets are one, two and four. One (PET) is pretty much all detergent bottles, juice bottles and those blue plastic water bottles. Two (PE-HD) covers milk and shampoo bottles, almost all plastic bottle tops, and all your household container – off brand Tupperware stuff. And plastic crates. Four (PE-LD) is all your packaging bags like milk sachets, bread packets, the plastic covering the 18 pack of toilet paper and the frozen vegetable bags – this is the main stock that our bin bags get made out of. The tech industry, however, is targeting something called ocean bound plastics. Samsung gets even more specific and uses fishing nets, for instance. HP sources its recycled plastic stock from an organizat

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