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Mura’s Tech Reduces Carbon Emissions from Plastic Wastes as per LCA Report

Published on 2023-03-17. Edited By : SpecialChem

TAGS:  Sustainability / Natural Solutions    

mura-reduce-carbon-emission The peer-reviewed Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) published by Warwick Manufacturing Group (WMG) at the University of Warwick reports that significantly reduced carbon emissions measured as Global Warming Potential (GWP) can be achieved if waste plastic is diverted towards HydroPRS™ by Mura Technology and away from waste incineration – the comparable end of life treatment and currently the fate of many ‘unrecyclable’ plastics.

Advanced (or chemical) recycling technologies include a range of processes that break plastics down, converting them into hydrocarbon products that can replace the virgin fossil feedstocks used by the chemicals industry to create new plastics and other industrial products such as asphalt.

Post-consumer Rigid Plastics into Petrochemical Feedstocks


Pioneered by Mura Technology, HydroPRS™, unlike pyrolysis, utilises supercritical water to convert post-consumer flexible, multi layered and rigid plastics into high yields of stable, premium petrochemical feedstocks. Importantly, the products produced in the HydroPRS™ process were found in the LCA to have equivalent to lower GWP when compared with naphtha, the fossil oil-based feedstock used in the production of plastics.

Dr Steve Mahon, Mura Technology’s CEO, says, “Resolving the global plastics crisis while reducing carbon emissions globally will inextricably require that the world is able to substitute fossil-based naphtha and other hydrocarbons for more sustainable feedstocks. This is Mura Technology’s ultimate goal, and our innately scalable, innovative advanced recycling process using supercritical water is uniquely placed to pave the way to enable a low-carbon, global circular plastics economy.

The LCA is based on data from Mura’s first commercial scale HydroPRS™ plant at Wilton, Teesside, UK. The LCA also explores the benefits of reducing GWP of the recycled hydrocarbon products by taking advantage of renewable energy supplies, heralding a pathway for making plastic production Net Zero.

Analysis of Advanced Recycling


The paper also highlights the importance of generating clear and scientifically robust data and analysis of advanced recycling, which aligns to the ‘transparency’ expectations in the WWF Chemical Recycling Implementation Principles which Mura strongly supports.

You might also be interested check Chemical Recycling of Plastic Waste: Basis, Technologies & Advances

Following the publication of these initial results, further work is now underway to assess the benefits of process improvements, as well as site specific LCAs for Mura’s ongoing infrastructure developments in the UK, United States and Germany.

The LCA is also consistent with the findings of the EU Commission Joint Research Centre’s recent advanced recycling LCA study(5), published in February 2023, to which Mura Technology contributed data, with HydroPRS™ being one of the technologies evaluated alongside pyrolysis and energy recovery. The LCA was funded through Innovate UK’s Smart Sustainable Plastic Packaging challenge(6) (SSPP), as part of their Demonstrator Programme.

Source: Mura Technology

Sustainability / Natural Solutions


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