Intelligent sorting of plastic packaging waste for recycling is poised to move forward.
AIM the European Brands Association and the
Alliance to End Plastic Waste announced this week a partnership to drive the next stage of development under the Digital Watermarks Initiative HolyGrail 2.0. They will work with the city of Copenhagen to conduct the semi-industrial test phase of the pilot. This milestone will be one step closer to precision identification and sorting of plastic packaging waste through digital watermarks, with the potential to revolutionize the sorting and recycling process of packaging.
Digital watermarks are discrete codes, each the size of a postage stamp. They cover the entire surface of a consumer goods packaging and carry a wide range of attributes such as packaging type, material, and usage. Used packaging is collected and scanned on the sorting line with a high-resolution camera which detects and decodes the digital watermark. The packaging is then sorted into corresponding streams, based on specified attributes including food, nonfood, or polymer types. This leads to more accurate sorting streams and higher quality recyclates to be diverted back into the plastic packaging value chain.
Over the next four months, a prototype sorting detection unit will be installed at the Amager Resource Centre (ARC) in Copenhagen, where the trials and demonstrations with around 125,000 pieces of packaging representing up to 260 different stock-keeping units (SKUs) will be held. Engineers will test for several parameters including the speed and accuracy of the system, to ensure its ability to withstand the pressures of full-scale industrial operations.
Sorting machinery vendors
Pellenc ST and
Tomra together with the selected digital watermarks technology provider
Digimarc are developing add-on modules for their detection sorting units, to be combined with existing near infra-red (NIR) sorters. Both modules will be tested during the semi-industrial phase via trials at two different test locations. The first controlled tests using industrial-sized equipment and the Pellenc ST/Digimarc module are scheduled for October 2021 at ARC sortingcentre.
During this commercial test phase, consumers will buy on-shelf products with digitally watermarked packaging. Used packaging will enter the waste stream after consumption. The sorting units will be placed in five different locations in France and Germany, including MRFs (Materials Recovery Facility), PRFs (Plastic Recovery Facility) and recycling plants.
Pending successful completion of the semi-industrial trials, brand owners and retailers will then bring their enhanced products to market in Denmark, France, and Germany by the first half of 2022 for in-market demonstrations and industrial-scale trials.
This last phase is scheduled to run until Q3 2022 followed by a public report outlining the techno-economic analysis of the digital watermark technology for sorting of packaging waste.
Stakeholder perspectives.This milestone marks the second year of the HolyGrail 2.0 project. Since its launch in September 2020, it has grown to include more than 130 participating companies and organisations across the complete packaging value chain. The pioneering HolyGrail 1.0 was facilitated by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation between 2016 and 2019.
“We are delighted to enter the next phase of semi-industrial testing within the Digital Watermarks Initiative together with our new partner, the Alliance to End Plastic Waste,” says Michelle Gibbons, AIM Director General. “An initiative like this can only thrive with the wide support of different key stakeholders in terms of expertise, but of course also financial support. Collaboration is the way forward to achieve the EU's circular economy goals and we are confident that this technology has the potential to drive a truly circular economy for packaging.”
“Recycling is a key pillar that must be invested in to advance a circular economy in plastic waste. The Alliance is excited to support the scaling of this project in its next phase of progress, in line with our mission to end plastic waste in the environment,” says Jacob Duer, President and CEO of the Alliance. “As testing continues, we know there will be many things to solve along the way, but with strong collaboration of our public and private sector partners, we believe intelligent sorting can be a new frontier that could help dramatically improve plastic waste management.”
“The City of Copenhagen has a political ambition to become the world’s first carbon neutral capital by 2025,” says Merete Kristoffersen, Head of Division, Waste and Resources, City of Copenhagen. High quality plastic recycling that substitutes new production and reduces incineration is a key instrument to reach this goal. HolyGrail 2.0 has the potential to achieve this, and we look forward to doing our part in the testing of the technology.”