Turning a ‘tragic plastic’ problem into a nation building solution

14th March 2019

Ground-breaking up-cycling invention to launch in South Africa

Imagine if all South Africa’s unrecycled plastic waste, at 1 100 000 million tons per year, could create thousands of jobs, clean our environment and help build our houses, hospitals, schools and roads.

Don Thompson, the CEO of The Center of Regenerative Design and Collaboration (CRDC), is about to make this a reality.  He is the inventor of a process that can turn any plastic – dirty or clean and in any form – into the very building blocks of sustainable development.  The product, EcoArena PRA (Pre-Conditioned Resin Aggregate) and Ecoblock are innovative environmentally friendly products which incorporate regenerated waste plastic particles combined with a standard sand-cement mixture to produce a highly resistant, durable cement or cement block while providing a viable up-cycling usage of this waste material.

The product has been tested and applied by PEDREGAL in Costa Rica for the past two years with great success (see brief case study below).   CRDC is also collaborating with international US chemicals giant, Dow in the development of EcoArena in a bid to develop a lead initiative for the alliance to end plastic waste.

https://corporate.dow.com/en-us/news/press-releases/dow-to-help-lead-1-billion-global-alliance-to-end-plastic-waste-in-the-environment

In South Africa, CRDC has partnered with a leading operations company that has extensive expertise and a long track record in on-site waste management, plastic recycling, waste to energy and implementation of zero waste to landfill solutions.

Donald Thomson and PEDREGAL are introducing EcoArena PRA to South Africa via an initial investor and partner roundtable to be held in Cape Town in the first week of April.

The case study

In Costa Rica, Thompson has been working with PEDREGAL, the largest cement, and concrete block company in Costa Rica and in collaboration with DOW, the American multinational chemical corporation.  Over the past two years, the product has been tested and used for the last six months.  The aim is to use 4 000 tonnes of plastic waste per month for the EcoArena technology. The feasibility of the product as an environmental break-through is proven and as a commercially viable and profitable commodity it also meets sustainable development requirements on all levels.

PEDREGAL began testing the use of EcoArena in their CMU concrete blocks, having achieved successful technical results and compliance with international standards (ASTM and C90).  PEDREGAL then introduced EcoArena to all their concrete products under the prefix ECO.  Sales and Marketing Director of PEDREGAL, David Zamora says: “This breakthrough in transforming plastic and using it in the same way as you would conventional aggregate is a game-changer.  Not only can we conduct our business in a more sustainable way but also we can also help solve one of the biggest problems we have created as human beings – that of plastic contamination.  This is the very essence of our circular economy – one in which the construction industry is helping the plastic industry solve a waste problem by turning it into a raw material that can be used in any construction on the planet.”

The key benefits of CRDC EcoArena

Concrete and construction

Environmental

Social and SMME

The case for upcycling plastic now

The UN wants individual countries to sign up to "significantly" reduce plastic production, including a phasing out of single-use plastics by 2030 – a goal inspired by the 2015 Paris Agreement on voluntary reductions of carbon emissions. "Plastic is a very good material, it's durable, flexible and light," Kiisler said. "This means we should make the best out of it for as long as possible instead of disposing of it."
 

www.news24.com/Green/News/plastic-in-crosshairs-at-un-environment-forum-20190311
 

Why South Africa? 

South Africa currently consumes 1.5m tonnes of plastic annually, of which only 21% is recycled.  The rest ends up in land fill, in rivers, on beaches and in our oceans.  A recycling programme is urgently needed.  Cleaning up plastic is not an easy task and it costs money to manage waste. All this bad news does not make for happy reading.  At the same time, industry and commerce, retailers and consumers are seeking better ways to work with plastic and most assume that the abolition or drastic reduction of the culprit plastic would be the best solution.    Don Thompson himself used to be consumed by a hatred for plastic, until he realised that it was necessary to work and within the plastic industry in order to combat the enormous waste problem.  After an arduous and interesting journey of anti-plastic activism, Thompson, an engineer, entrepreneur and environmentalist, invented a product that uses plastic – all and any waste plastic. 

At a time when the world is in outcry about ‘tragic plastic’ in our oceans, CRDC, which works with the Ocean Recovery Alliance, has created not only a fool-proof solution but also a game-changer for using plastic waste in a commercially viable manner.   By delivering an effective environmental solution, EcoArena also provides a compelling answer to some of South Africa’s societal problems. 

CRDC will be testing EcoArena PRA with two major concrete manufacturers in the Western Cape as well as a major South African cement producer.  “In South Africa, there is an established and sophisticated cement industry.  Against this, we need to create jobs, we need to clean up the environment and there is an urgent need for housing.  Our plan is to use the Costa Rican model to initially launch in the Western Cape before rolling out the initiative nationally.” 

Thompson explains that Costa Rica is a small market (5 million people) compared to South Africa, which is more developed and has as many if not more pressing social needs.  The long-term plan for EcoArena is to then to take it to the first world.

The South African government has recognised the role that waste can play in creating jobs and socio- economic opportunities, and in moving South Africa towards a more resource efficient economy. This is evident in the number of initiatives and legislative reforms that have been proposed by government to boost growth in this sector (Source:  Green Cape 2018 Waste Market Intelligence Report).

The product and process

EcoArena incorporates regenerated waste plastic particles with a standard sand-cement mixture to create a highly resistant, durable cement, concrete block.  or any formed concrete product. Each EcoArena block contains 260 grams of plastic, none of which needs to be separated, cleaned or treated in any way – even if it contains sand or is contaminated.  Very little water is used in the process. The resultant EcoArena block represents a 5-10% decrease in total weight compared to a standard concrete block.

The process begins upon the disposal and recovery of the waste plastic, after which the obtained material is converted to a solid mass via heat extrusion. It is then ground to the required particle specifications. After this processing phase, the resulting mixed-polymer aggregate is incorporated directly into a mixer with a sand-cement mixture. Once a homogeneous mixture is achieved the moulding process for creating the standard block begins and emerges, showing no visible difference from traditional concrete aggregates. The resulting product is equal in terms of resistance and mechanical characteristics to a traditional concrete block – the only difference is that it is considerably lighter and stronger while also effectively using a large quantity of plastic waste and eliminating it from landfill with the attendant benefits of also reducing the CO2 emissions of plastic in landfill.  EcoArena will help reduce carbon footprints for municipalities, plastic manufacturers and the cement and concrete industries.

Thompson explains: “The objective is to create a platform whereby single-use plastics may be transitioned into a supply stream for high-quality construction materials while providing a solution to two of the world´s most pressing issues:  the recovery of waste plastics from the environment and the global housing deficit.  Every sector of society, including the under-privileged and homeless, stands to benefit from the application of this innovation and plan.”

Please view the attached CRDC EcoArena presentation and the attached video or view the EcoArena video here