HCB Magazine November 2019

Page 3

UP FRONT  01

EDITOR’S LETTER

It is good to be able to spend some time at the desk after a hectic

Any closed loop system relies on all participants in the

few weeks attending conferences around the world. These events

circular supply chain to do their part to keep the loop going.

can merge into one another after a while, particularly when they

In many supply chains, the weakest link may well be the

are often covering much of the same ground – although if all the

consumer – and they need to be incentivised in some way to

organisers are agreeing on the hot topics of the year, then they are

play their part. Perhaps, it was suggested, in the future we

probably all making the right call.

will not buy shoes and clothes but merely pay a monthly ‘rent’

After the past two years, which focused very much on the use of digital technologies to enhance efficiency in the chemical supply chain, this year the agreed topic was sustainability. This might

to the manufacturer, to ensure that we take them back to the store at the end of their useful life and get a replacement. There are, though, two obvious examples of a closed

seem like an old topic come back to haunt us but it was obvious

loop system in the chemical supply chain. One long-

that, for all the talk of sustainability and all the pages of annual

established loop is provided by some of the major packaging

sustainability reports generated (probably at a high cost in terms

manufacturers, who have put in place networks to collect

of greenhouse gas emissions), nothing much has been achieved.

and return used IBCs so they can be cleaned and

Perhaps, some wondered, digitisation may have a role to play in

remanufactured. This month we report on Mauser’s extended

doing something concrete towards improving the sustainability

range of packagings manufactured from post-consumer

record of the petrochemical sector?

resin, which takes that on to the realm of plastics drums.

One practical method of improving sustainability is to move towards a circular economy. Instead of the old pattern of ‘extract-manufacture-dispose’, the circular economy has a

And, of course, steel drums and IBCs have long been retrieved and re-used. The tank container is another closed loop packaging; meant

pattern of ‘reuse-remanufacture-recycle’. Closing this loop

to last for decades, these packagings are valuable items in

leads to much better utilisation of finite resources and, along

themselves and therefore are meant to be re-used many

the way, also helps the supply chain, since there is a built-in

times over. Which makes it very strange that some chemical

backhaul cargo.

manufacturers opt for single-use packagings, at least for their

But it is difficult to find examples of the circular economy in the

non-hazardous products. Flexitanks are the polar opposite of

chemical industry. Extensive discussion during EPCA’s Annual

tank containers: single-use bags with no apparent return and

Meeting in Berlin last month did point to a few: one manufacturer

recycling loop, and are often used once and sent to landfill.

of sports shoes, for instance, is now making a trainer from a single

Those using them should consider whether this fits their

polymer, to make it easier to recycle, and Ineos has run a pilot project

sustainability goals.

to turn used yoghurt pots back into virgin-quality polystyrene.

Peter Mackay

WWW.HCBLIVE.COM


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