
Advanced recycling can help us recycle a lot more plastics
Here’s how we plan to do it

Today’s recycling systems can recover some used plastic. But not anywhere near enough.
That’s what makes burgeoning private investments in new recycling technologies so exciting.
These technologies can dramatically increase the types and amount of plastic that can be recycled.
Which reduces the need for fossil resources and keeps plastic out of landfills. And our environment.

It’s called advanced recycling.
These technologies turn used solid plastic into its gas or liquid raw materials to be remade into brand new plastic for use in virtually any plastic product or packaging.
More than 90% of plastics aren’t being recycled. America’s plastic makers are investing in new technologies to change that. Advanced recycling is a breakthrough for reclaiming used plastics.
Here are five things you need to know about advanced recycling. Many people in the industry use the term “advanced recycling.” It means taking plastics back to their molecular form so they can be reprocessed into new products. Every week you take your trash and put it out at the curb. Imagine if that litter were dollar bills — you’d pick it up. That’s what we’re doing. We’re creating value for something that has no value.
Not all used plastic can go through the mechanical recycling process. That’s what’s really exciting about advanced recycling — it allows you to address hard-to-recycle plastics that can’t be recycled today. Advanced recycling is going to help eliminate plastic waste that currently goes to landfills, so we can use fewer natural resources in our products.
In the next 10 years, advanced recycling will have a strong foothold in the industry. It’s clearly the future. If you want to make a real dent in plastic recycling, advanced recycling is one of the top ways to do it — along with having good infrastructure.
Learn more about new technologies changing how we recycle, reuse, and remake plastics.

The plastics recycling industry is investing billions of dollars in these technologies and has launched dozens of projects designed to divert millions of tons of used plastic per year from landfills.

Multiple large consumer product companies already create packaging using recycled plastics created by these technologies. And they are clamoring for more to meet sustainability goals.
Hundreds of companies have committed to make more of their packaging recyclable and to use more recycled content. For more info, visit U.S. Plastics Pact.
Advanced recycling can help these companies meet their sustainability goals.
Watch some of the people making sustainable change by helping bring advanced recycling technologies to life.

What’s needed to make plastic recycling work better? A team effort.
To recycle plastic, an interwoven chain of players must work in concert. The plastic recycling chain can be viewed as a virtuous circle, in which each player enables the next.
LEARN MORE About Advanced Recycling
Take a deeper dive and learn more about how advanced recycling can tackle the 90% of plastics that aren’t recycled today.
Fact Sheets
The following series illustrates how advanced recycling turns used plastic into new plastic and provides more information about the environmental profile of this new manufacturing technology.
Insights
Find out what’s happening in Advanced Recycling and how we’re making sustainable change.
Podcasts
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Episode 56
How Akron Is Reviving American Manufacturing Through Polymer Innovation
Shammas Malik, Mayor of AkronWhat does the future of American manufacturing look like? In Akron, Ohio, it looks like innovation rooted in legacy. In this episode of Sustainably Speaking, host Mia Quinn sits down with Akron Mayor Shammas Malik to explore how the city is transforming its historic rubber industry into a modern hub for polymers, advanced materials, and sustainable manufacturing.
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Episode 55
Opening Doors In STEM with Vaishali Udupa and Jennifer Ronk
Vaishali Udupa & Jennifer RonkIn this episode of Sustainably Speaking, host Mia Quinn sits down with former Commissioner of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Vaishali Udupa and Jennifer Ronk, a plastics and sustainability expert at Dow, to explore how STEM careers are opening doors far beyond the lab. From supervising crews on job sites to leading ~10,000 people at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Jennifer and Vaishali share candid stories about leadership, resilience, and the mentors who changed their lives. They unpack why sustainability is "everybody's job," how patents fuel innovation, and why the next generation shouldn't be afraid of AI.
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Episode 54
Recycling’s Big Year and Even Bigger Future with Ross Eisenberg
Ross Eisenberg, President of America’s Plastic MakersIn this episode of Sustainably Speaking, host Mia Quinn welcomes back Ross Eisenberg, President of America’s Plastic Makers™, for a wide-ranging conversation on why recycling is no longer just an environmental issue—it’s an economic and manufacturing opportunity hiding in plain sight.
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Episode 53
Investing in Sustainable Technology with SK Capital’s Anne Kolton
Anne Kolton, Chief Sustainability Officer, SK Capital PartnersIn this episode of Sustainably Speaking, host Mia Quinn sits down with Anne Kolton, Chief Sustainability Officer at SK Capital Partners, to explore how private equity is supporting the next wave of innovation in materials, plastics, and manufacturing. From dissolvable packaging to AI-powered manufacturing, Anne shares how breakthrough new technologies are unlocking a new era of sustainabilit
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Episode 52
Designing More Recyclable Vehicles with Hyundai’s Amanda Nummy
Amanda Nummy, Senior Polymer Materials Engineer, Hyundai Motor CompanyWhat it takes to build a vehicle that’s more recyclable from the start




