GOEX Talks Trash About Closed-loop Plastic Recycling
November 2007
JANESVILLE, Wis.—GOEX Corp., a leading manufacturer of printable custom plastic sheet, has developed a sustainable alternative approach to plastic recycling that helps avoid the landfill and returns a saleable product to its customers.
Virtually all plastics created from nonrenewable resources such as oil, coal or natural gas, together with colorants and other performance-enhancing ingredients, represent a final product that is increasingly visible in this environmentally conscious era. Biodegradable plastics made from renewable resources represent one focus of an emerging industry intent on making products that allow users to control when and how plastic material degrades, while insuring the product remains viable while still in use.
While acknowledging the time, energy and marketing dollars being spent in the effort to develop so-called “green” plastics, “We thought it might be a worthy idea to have a conversation with our customers about reusing their processed scrap,” says GOEX President Josh Gray. “That’s where the value is, not in selling scrap to a broker for 1-3 cents per pound or having it wind up in the landfill.”
Years ago, most plastic sheet suppliers did not consider taking material back from the customer’s waste stream. However, says Vice President of Sales and Marketing Bob Waddell, “In light of the growing emphasis on green manufacturing and sustainable business practices, we realized GOEX had access to a tremendous untapped, unfocused resource in the form of materials that previously were considered scrap.”
Waste Not, Want Not
The result of this realization is a policy GOEX terms “zero landfill,” which the company promotes as an opportunity for customers to extract value from processed plastics they previously regarded as waste.
“GOEX has recycled its internal scrap for 25 years, so the concept isn’t new for us,” says Gray. “What is new is our ability to pull back plastic sheet materials that have non-plastic components. For example, returned scrap from a card manufacturer may have been printed, but may also have magnetic tape, over-lamination film, signature panels and more. These materials now can be recycled back into a functional/printable plastic sheet that our customers can use again and again.”
Here’s an example of how it works: The customer prints and processes a laminated PVC card job, collecting its make-ready sheet scrap, card skeleton scrap and finished card scrap. If that customer needs “recycled” material, they would then send their PVC card scrap to GOEX so that it can be “conditioned” and reprocessed. To ensure the scrap recycling process is sustainable, GOEX “sweetens” the recycled material with virgin raw material every time it is returned. “You have to have the effect of adding virgin material to get an affordable product that performs well,” Gray explains.
Virtually all plastics created from nonrenewable resources such as oil, coal or natural gas, together with colorants and other performance-enhancing ingredients, represent a final product that is increasingly visible in this environmentally conscious era. Biodegradable plastics made from renewable resources represent one focus of an emerging industry intent on making products that allow users to control when and how plastic material degrades, while insuring the product remains viable while still in use.
While acknowledging the time, energy and marketing dollars being spent in the effort to develop so-called “green” plastics, “We thought it might be a worthy idea to have a conversation with our customers about reusing their processed scrap,” says GOEX President Josh Gray. “That’s where the value is, not in selling scrap to a broker for 1-3 cents per pound or having it wind up in the landfill.”
Years ago, most plastic sheet suppliers did not consider taking material back from the customer’s waste stream. However, says Vice President of Sales and Marketing Bob Waddell, “In light of the growing emphasis on green manufacturing and sustainable business practices, we realized GOEX had access to a tremendous untapped, unfocused resource in the form of materials that previously were considered scrap.”
Waste Not, Want Not
The result of this realization is a policy GOEX terms “zero landfill,” which the company promotes as an opportunity for customers to extract value from processed plastics they previously regarded as waste.
“GOEX has recycled its internal scrap for 25 years, so the concept isn’t new for us,” says Gray. “What is new is our ability to pull back plastic sheet materials that have non-plastic components. For example, returned scrap from a card manufacturer may have been printed, but may also have magnetic tape, over-lamination film, signature panels and more. These materials now can be recycled back into a functional/printable plastic sheet that our customers can use again and again.”
Here’s an example of how it works: The customer prints and processes a laminated PVC card job, collecting its make-ready sheet scrap, card skeleton scrap and finished card scrap. If that customer needs “recycled” material, they would then send their PVC card scrap to GOEX so that it can be “conditioned” and reprocessed. To ensure the scrap recycling process is sustainable, GOEX “sweetens” the recycled material with virgin raw material every time it is returned. “You have to have the effect of adding virgin material to get an affordable product that performs well,” Gray explains.



