When stories from the world of waste appear in the mainstream media, you can be sure the subject is a big deal for the industry itself. The impact of the oil price slump on the plastics recycling industry is a case in point. With the price of a barrel of crude dropping from around $105 in June 2014 to a paltry $28.50 by January this year, it became increasingly difficult for recycled plastics to compete with virgin materials on price.
Adding to the “perfect storm” the fall in oil prices came hot on the heels of a slowdown in demand from China and changes to the composition of plastics in the waste stream.
Major investments were at stake, many struggled, some went under – unable to swim in the rising tide of cheap oil. As far back as April last year, less than 12 months into the slump, the Wall Street Journal published an article titled “Recycling Becomes a Tougher Sell as Oil Prices Drop”, while the Financial Times ran with “Plastic recyclers point to meltdown in face of low oil price”.
Speaking with WMW, Keith Freegard, director and founder of Axion Recycling Ltd., explains that one of the problems faced by some plastics recycling firms when the oil price crashed was that the prices they had agreed with their customers were linked to the price of virgin material.
“In a nine month period they saw HDPE go from £1400 to £700 ($1800 to $900) per tonne, and they were linked to that index so they were immediately losing money,” he says. “A massive slice of the costs are capital investment, operating costs, labour, maintenance – all the things about running a recycling business. Plus, if you’re a young business, a massive amount of debt to be repaid – you can’t take the huge downturn in price that you could if you’re attached to a global firm’s oil refinery.”
It’s just such circumstances which led to one high-profile casualty in the UK – Dagenham-based Closed Loop Recycling. The firm had invested heavily in high-tech equipment allowing it to process waste packaging, PET and HDPE bales into high quality food-grade pellets at its 65,000 tonne per year plant.
Having initially hit trouble a couple of years back, the company was subsequently taken over by an investment firm, but ultimately it was unable to cope with the economic headwinds and in May this year the administrators were called in.
However, that was not to be the end of the story and in July the plant was acquired by Veolia, which with its deep pockets and wealth of feedstock seems perfectly poised to take advantage of the dedicated processing capacity.