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  • Milk cartons, Styrofoam cups,

  • grocery store bags -

  • a new plant in Indiana wants them all.

  • Brightmark's facility

  • is the first of its kind in the US.

  • It converts plastic waste into wax

  • and eco-friendly fuels on a commercial scale.

  • We take a whole array of mixed waste

  • like the ones you see behind me here,

  • that until now was not easily recyclable and reusable,

  • and create circular economy solutions

  • to some of our biggest environmental issues.

  • In its initial year,

  • the plant will process close to 100,000 tons of plastic -

  • which is about the weight of 600 blue whales -

  • from waste management companies,

  • manufacturers and environmental groups.

  • The full conversion process is a company secret,

  • but it begins with breaking bales of plastic apart ...

  • I handle all the solid product that comes in,

  • and we sort it, put it onto the line.

  • ... then shredding the plastic into small pellets.

  • We've got employees that are basically refinery operators.

  • So they take the plastic pellet

  • and they convert that into our finished products.

  • Finished products include

  • ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel,

  • and companies like BP are already placing orders.

  • The BPs of the world, who've been very forward-thinking

  • and are looking to a net carbon-zero future,

  • find our products to be really helpful.

  • And it's much better than pulling crude oil

  • out of the ground to make diesel.

  • Critics of plastic-to-fuel technology

  • say these types of plants can release harmful emissions

  • of their own, when plastic is heated during conversion,

  • not to mention diesel's own contribution to air pollution.

  • But Brightmark argues that its method

  • is still better than what's happening now.

  • Studies show that if the global plastic industry

  • continues as it is,

  • then by 2050, there will be more plastic waste

  • in the ocean than fish.

  • - We need to change this,

  • and it all starts right here in Ashley,

  • so that by 2050, we can look back and say

  • we changed the course of this issue we had with plastics.

  • Similar companies are already operating

  • in Europe and Asia.

  • Before now, access to materials,

  • the price of equivalent fuels,

  • and operational costs have stopped them

  • from reaching their potential in the US.

  • Brightmark has appeared to solve this equation.

  • Demand for its solutions is high,

  • and the company plans to build more plants

  • across the country.

  • We've had literally almost thousands

  • of communities say,

  • "We would like for you to help solve the plastic problem

  • in our community."

  • For employees, the mission here is clear.

  • Brightmark is not just a job.

  • It's thinking of the future.

  • And in the future,

  • the ideal would be to have no more work to do at all.

  • The day that we ran out of plastics

  • to put into our facilities would be a great day,

  • because it means we've changed

  • the waste problem in the world.

Milk cartons, Styrofoam cups,

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