Plastics maker Indorama commits $1.5 billion to recycling
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[August 21, 2019] By
Chayut Setboonsarng
BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thai chemicals company
Indorama Ventures <IVL.BK> has committed $1.5 billion of investment in
recycling as consumers become more aware of the environmental impact of
single-use plastic and regulators push for more recycling, it said on
Wednesday.
Indorama's main business is the production of PET resin, a polymer used
to make plastic bottles and fibers used in products such as seat belts
and tyres.
In the 12 months to June 30 the company produced nearly 5,000 kilotons
of PET.
"We are investing $1 billion in recycling over the next five years,"
Chief Executive Aloke Lohia told Reuters on Wednesday, adding that
investment would include greenfield and brownfield mergers and
acquisitions focusing on bottle-to-bottle recycling.
Indorama has 11 recycling sites around the world, including plants in
Thailand, Mexico and France, and aims to step up its green credentials
in response to new regulation being rolled out by governments as well as
changing expectations from customers.
In March the European Commission announced a target to incorporate 25%
of recycled plastic in PET bottles by 2025, with a targeted 90%
collection rate.
After 2023 Indorama plans to invest an additional $500 million by 2025
to help its customers to achieve the 25% target, Lohia added.
Indian-born Lohia started Indorama in Thailand in 1994 with about 200
employees. The company has since grown to employ 18,000 people across 31
countries.
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Plastic bottles of Coca-Cola at a Carrefour hypermarket store in
Montreuil, near Paris, France, February 5, 2018. REUTERS/Regis
Duvignau
"There is infrastructure in the world to recycle PET. The problem lies in the
collection," he said.
Consultancy Wood Mackenzie Chemicals estimates that the collection rate for PET
beverage bottles in the European Union was about 58% in 2017.
About 40 percent of Indorama's revenue is from North America and about 30
percent from Europe.
Indorama, which counts Coca-Cola <KO.N>, PepsiCo <PEP.O> and Nestle <NESN.S>
among its customers, said it is working with brand owners and governments to
allow more bottle-to-bottle recycling.
The acquisitive company still has $2.5 billion of uncommitted capital for new
projects in its other businesses, including olefin, fibers and feedstocks, Lohia
said.
Indorama this month bought Huntsman Corp's <HUN.N> chemical intermediates
businesses in Australia, India and the U.S. state of Texas for about $2.1
billion, beefing up its midstream operations.
(Reporting by Chayut Setboonsarng; Editing by David Goodman)
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