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New plastic baler in Delta boosts automotive container recycling capacity

1.7 million kilograms of automotive plastic containers are recycled annually by Interchange Recycling
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Interchange Recycling, the not-for-profit organization dedicated to the collection and recycling of used oil, antifreeze, and automotive containers in B.C., has announced that its industry partner Safety-Kleen Canada Inc. has installed a new plastic baler in Delta.

Interchange Recycling, the not-for-profit organization dedicated to the collection and recycling of used oil, antifreeze, and automotive containers in B.C., has announced that its industry partner Safety-Kleen Canada Inc. has installed a new plastic baler in Delta.

The new plastic baler will help improve automotive container recycling rates across B.C. and Canada and will process over half a million kilograms of automotive plastic annually. It is the first-of-its-kind in the province capable of facilitating increased consolidation with other automotive and industrial liquid packaging from across the country.

“We have been working with Safety-Kleen Canada Inc. for two decades to help to close the loop on the life cycle of oil in the auto industry by diverting used oil, oil filters and used antifreeze from landfills,” said David Lawes, CEO Interchange Recycling. “With this new infrastructure, our partnership with them has deepened as they have expanded their operation to include the collection of automotive containers.

“Currently in B.C., 1.7 million kg of automotive plastic containers are recycled every year, but I expect that will grow with the new plastic baler. Most of the recycled containers will end up being used again in industrial sectors or in landscaping, and the plastic collected will circle back into the North American economy.”

The new plastic baler in Delta supports Canada’s shift from a linear “take-make-dispose” method by handling automotive containers at the end of their anticipated life, extending their use, and sending them back into the production chain to create new and useful products.

“We needed brand new infrastructure to help process plastic locally,” said Sam Glofcheskie Regional Vice President, Safety-Kleen Canada Inc. - Bulk Product and Services. “Right now, only around nine per cent of plastic waste is recycled in Canada. We want to help fix that. The new baler has allowed us to create jobs in the province, has expanded our partnership with Interchange Recycling, and is going to help British Columbia move a step closer towards a circular system in the auto space. The plastic we encounter and bale at our facility in Delta will go to the RPM eco processing facility in Quebec where it will be recycled and eventually re-used as new product.”