Secrecy at the End of the Recycling Chain: The Recycling of Plastic Waste in Surabaya, Indonesia

The aim of this article is to address the question: Why companies which produce or use pellets made from recycled plastics choose a strategic invisibility for their activities. The recycling of plastics is a process spread over an extended recycling supply chain. The negative stigma associated with...

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Main Author: Freek Colombijn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2020-04-01
Series:Worldwide Waste
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/43
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spelling doaj-c813f31e1dd64017b6c367aa8aab06932020-11-25T02:57:48ZengUbiquity PressWorldwide Waste2399-71172020-04-013110.5334/wwwj.4321Secrecy at the End of the Recycling Chain: The Recycling of Plastic Waste in Surabaya, IndonesiaFreek Colombijn0Vrije Universiteit AmsterdamThe aim of this article is to address the question: Why companies which produce or use pellets made from recycled plastics choose a strategic invisibility for their activities. The recycling of plastics is a process spread over an extended recycling supply chain. The negative stigma associated with recycled plastic in Indonesia is directed away from the factories towards the waste-pickers, junk-dealers and grinders who work the waste manually from which the recycled plastic is selected. Their remoteness from the source not only allows the factories to shake off the opprobrium of working with waste, they can also distance themselves from what goes on earlier in the supply chain. They are not held accountable for possible environmental or social mismanagement in the sorting of plastic waste. The factories, nevertheless, manage to maintain control over this supply chain by setting standards for the materials they accept. The factories have the power to declare which supplier is up to standard and which is not, and have the alternative of opting for virgin plastic made from mineral oil, which keeps prices of recycled plastic low. This conspicuous invisibility is convenient for all involved in the recycling industry in the short run, but more openness would be better for all sides.https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/43recyclingvalue chainsupply chainplastic wasteindonesiaproduction of recycled plastics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Freek Colombijn
spellingShingle Freek Colombijn
Secrecy at the End of the Recycling Chain: The Recycling of Plastic Waste in Surabaya, Indonesia
Worldwide Waste
recycling
value chain
supply chain
plastic waste
indonesia
production of recycled plastics
author_facet Freek Colombijn
author_sort Freek Colombijn
title Secrecy at the End of the Recycling Chain: The Recycling of Plastic Waste in Surabaya, Indonesia
title_short Secrecy at the End of the Recycling Chain: The Recycling of Plastic Waste in Surabaya, Indonesia
title_full Secrecy at the End of the Recycling Chain: The Recycling of Plastic Waste in Surabaya, Indonesia
title_fullStr Secrecy at the End of the Recycling Chain: The Recycling of Plastic Waste in Surabaya, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Secrecy at the End of the Recycling Chain: The Recycling of Plastic Waste in Surabaya, Indonesia
title_sort secrecy at the end of the recycling chain: the recycling of plastic waste in surabaya, indonesia
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Worldwide Waste
issn 2399-7117
publishDate 2020-04-01
description The aim of this article is to address the question: Why companies which produce or use pellets made from recycled plastics choose a strategic invisibility for their activities. The recycling of plastics is a process spread over an extended recycling supply chain. The negative stigma associated with recycled plastic in Indonesia is directed away from the factories towards the waste-pickers, junk-dealers and grinders who work the waste manually from which the recycled plastic is selected. Their remoteness from the source not only allows the factories to shake off the opprobrium of working with waste, they can also distance themselves from what goes on earlier in the supply chain. They are not held accountable for possible environmental or social mismanagement in the sorting of plastic waste. The factories, nevertheless, manage to maintain control over this supply chain by setting standards for the materials they accept. The factories have the power to declare which supplier is up to standard and which is not, and have the alternative of opting for virgin plastic made from mineral oil, which keeps prices of recycled plastic low. This conspicuous invisibility is convenient for all involved in the recycling industry in the short run, but more openness would be better for all sides.
topic recycling
value chain
supply chain
plastic waste
indonesia
production of recycled plastics
url https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/43
work_keys_str_mv AT freekcolombijn secrecyattheendoftherecyclingchaintherecyclingofplasticwasteinsurabayaindonesia
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