UFlex showcases expertise in building circularity in multi-layered plastics

Ashok Chaturvedi, chairman and managing director, UFlex, shared his insights to build circularity in multi-layered plastics packaging at the Alliance to End Plastic Waste (AEPW) board meeting, held on 30 November 2022, at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), New York.

09 Dec 2022 | 3064 Views | By Rahul Kumar

UFlex is credited to be the first company in the world to recycle mixed plastic waste (since 1995) from its recycling facilities in Noida, and has been recognised for its efforts by the Davos Recycling Forum and by the Government of India.

At the AEPW board meeting in New York, Chaturvedi made a strong case for the continued and ubiquitous use of multi-layer mixed plastic (MLP) that provide a barrier that is required for packaging of a number of essential items including food products; enable high-speed packing; are cost-effective, and are 100% recyclable.

Chaturvedi’s presentation to the AEPW Board included a virtual walkthrough of the UFlex recycling facilities at Noida, Poland and Mexico to recycle and upcycle post-consumer multi-layer mixed plastic waste into value-added household and industrial plastic products such as dustbins, outdoor furniture, and more. 

UFlex runs an advanced injection moulding facility at its Noida site and this was established to recycle granules and to demonstrate various possibilities to the moulding industry. Today, decorative, functional, engineering parts, household and office products, and hundreds of other articles are being manufactured with recycled granules at UFlex’s recycling facilities. 

UFlex has recycled more than half a million tonnes of multi-layer mixed plastic waste so far and has spent more than 20 million US dollars in the last financial year at its Poland and Mexico sites. 

As an industry leader in building sustainable flexible packaging solutions, UFlex runs a global sustainability initiative called Project Plastic Fix. This initiative is aligned with the company’s sustainability approach of four Rs to tackle the challenge of reducing stock and flow of plastic waste in the environment — reduce plastic at source by manufacturing and using films made from PCR; recycle via upcycling and downcycling of MLP and PET containers, covers, other articles and bottles; reuse as source substitution via pyrolysis and return to the planet in the form of biomass, if the plastic waste remains uncollected.

Chaturvedi volunteered to provide technical knowledge and related support to any organisation or country that would like to replicate and scale recycling infrastructure to pivot to a circular economy. He urged brand owners and civic bodies across regions and countries to collaborate and strengthen the recycling value chain.

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