Timor-Leste could become the first plastic neutral nation

Published Thu 05 Sep 2019

SBS World News
Posted on 03/09/2019
BY SANDRA FULLOON

Technology donated to the Southeast Asian nation aims to recycle 20,000 tonnes of plastic each year – and inventors say it could also solve Australia’s plastic waste problem. Australian inventor and entrepreneur Dr Len Humphreys has found a way to convert used plastic into products such as fuel – and he says it’s a game changer. “We have the ability to recycle materials that traditionally went to landfill,” Dr Humphreys told SBS’s Small Business Secrets. “This technology allows us to unlock many high-value chemicals and fuels.”

Timor-Leste, which is marking 20 years since its independence referendum this week, is to get the first commercial Catalytic Hydrothermal Reactor (Cat-HTR) recycling plant, with work due to start next year. 

Dr Humphreys developed the technology with University of Sydney professor Thomas Maschmeyer. The $60 million plant will help process 70 tonnes of plastic waste generated in Timor-Leste each day, as the government aims for it to become the world’s first plastic neutral nation. What plastic neutral means - Plastic neutral means no used plastics will enter the environment as waste, and will instead be recycled into new products.

The chemical recycling solution aims to keep plastic waste out of oceans, soils, incinerators and landfill. “It will make a big difference to plastic waste reduction and reduce harm to our cherished marine life,” Timor-Leste secretary of state for the environment Demetrio do Amaral de Carvalho has said. The plant can convert 20,000 tonnes of plastic waste to oil annually. It is being developed by Mura Technology, a joint venture between Dr Humphrey’s company Licella and Armstrong Energy in the UK.

The oil produced can be sold as fuel or used to make a range of petro-chemical products from bitumen to kerosene, earning income from otherwise wasted materials. “It’s not just plastics consumed there, but Timor-Leste is also the target for ocean plastics, as a lot washes up on their beaches,” Dr Humphreys said. “Now they can use this chemical process to convert plastics to useful materials, and do that indefinitely.”

The Cat-HTR method of recycling plastic is also attracting attention in Europe and Canada. “We are overwhelmed with interest. The world has come awake to what we are doing with hydro-thermal upgrading, which has a better carbon footprint than other techniques,” Dr Humphreys said. “And we are struggling to keep up with demand.” Federal Government grants and Sydney University research assistance helped fund development. “It’s taken $75 million and five years of hard work to prove the process is commercially viable,” he said.

How the technology works - Dr Humphreys was born in Stockton-on-Tees in England’s north east and migrated to Australia in 1997. He holds a PhD in Chemistry. His company Licella currently chemically recycle end-of-life plastics at a pilot plant at Somersby, on the NSW Central Coast, and he explained to Small Business Secrets how the technology works. “End-of-life plastic is a combination of films, pots, pans and trays,” he said. “In the Cat-HTR process, molten plastic collides with water that’s heated to extreme temperatures, and in that super-critical state, oil and water mix.” “Then, the water will start to unzip the plastics back to the original components, to produce what we call ‘plasticrude’. “We are literally re-refining plastic.”

A Central Coast waste depot run by partner-business IQ Renew generates up to 15 bales of end-of-life plastic each day. Its COO Graham Knowles said: “There are other options to melt it and put into roads – that’s a great solution and some recycling companies are turning this into furniture and garden bollards. For now, though, most of it ends up in landfill.” “The unique solution we have, that no-one else in the world is doing, is the ability to turn this end-of-life plastic back into synthetic crude oil.”

‘A solution for Australia’ - With global plastic production exceeding 300 million tonnes each year, Asia’s rejection of plastic waste has forced a global review of recycling practices. “So we’re all in trouble, and the whole world has been shaken up,” Dr Humphreys said. “It puts responsibility back to where it always should have been, on us to recycle our end-of-life plastics.” Dr Humphreys believes he has found the solution, and not just for Timor-Leste. “We have the knowhow and the ability to roll out these plants within the next 10 years, managing plastic as a resource,” Dr Humpreys said.

Gayle Sloan, CEO at Waste Management and Resource Recovery Association of Australia (WMRR), said Australia needs to accelerate recycling plans for waste materials across all industries. “Technically anything can be composted or recycled if it’s economically viable,” she said. “The conservative estimate of moving to a circular economy is that nine billion dollars could be added to the economy through job creation and the value of waste, which would double the value of our industry.”

View SBS Small Business Secrets video here.