Today’s Solutions: April 10, 2025

Currently, people in the UK are recycling nearly 45 percent of their plastic waste, and that number is expected to rise in the following years. However, one of the problems with current plastic recycling methods is that you end up with a lower-quality plastic with worse properties than the original.

This means that plastic drinks bottles cannot simply be recycled into new drink bottles continuously, but instead are used for other lower-grade products such as water pipes, park benches, and traffic cones.

Now, scientists from the University of Bath have developed a way to recycle plastic hundreds of times without losing the quality of the material. The novel recycling method involves converting plastics back into their constituent chemical molecules so that they can be used to make new plastics of the same quality as the original.

The researchers recycled plant-based PLA, which is made from starch or crop waste instead of petrochemicals and is used in “biodegradable” food packaging and disposable cutlery and cups. The team has also started trialing a similar process for recycling PET, which is used for drinks bottles.

As the idea of transitioning to a circular economic model is steadily gaining momentum, we hope to see more breakthroughs of the like in the near future.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Super small dissolvable pacemaker offers safer, simpler heart treatment

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a brilliant medical innovation, researchers developed the smallest known pacemaker—smaller than a grain of rice—that dissolves in ...

Read More

Tiny sparks, massive implications: how water droplets may have ignited life o...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Could the origin of life have begun not with a bolt from the blue but with something far ...

Read More

Listen to this fascinating piece of ambient music composed by stars

Though we can’t hear them, stars propagate some incredibly soothing soundscapes through the vacuum of space. And for the first time, music composed from ...

Read More

Cracking the case: Is joint cracking harmful or simply satisfying?

Many of us have been warned about cracking our knuckles due to stories of arthritis and joint problems. Is there any truth to this ...

Read More