PureCycle Technologies, Inc. is a sustainable materials company that develops and licenses patented recycling technology designed to restore post‐consumer polypropylene waste to virgin‐like quality. The company’s core business activity centers on an innovative solvent‐based purification process, which removes contaminants and impurities from recycled polypropylene feedstock. This approach yields a product known as PureCycle Resin, a recycled polymer suitable for use in food‐grade packaging, consumer goods, automotive components, and other applications that traditionally rely on virgin plastics.
PureCycle offers both proprietary technology licensing and finished‐resin sales. Partners and licensees can implement the PureCycle purification process at their own facilities, while PureCycle’s wholly owned manufacturing plant in Ironton, Ohio produces commercial volumes of the recycled resin. The resin produced meets stringent regulatory standards and is positioned as a drop‐in replacement for virgin polypropylene in existing supply chains, helping customers meet sustainability targets without significant retooling.
Founded in 2015 as a spin‐off from research at Procter & Gamble, PureCycle went public in 2021 through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company. Since then, the company has focused on scaling its manufacturing capacity, with plans for additional purification facilities in North America and Asia. PureCycle’s global footprint aims to address growing demand from consumer packaged goods companies, packaging converters, and industrial users seeking to reduce their reliance on fossil‐based plastics.
Under the leadership of CEO Rob Bienenstock and a management team with deep experience in materials science and industrial operations, PureCycle has secured strategic partnerships and joint ventures to expand its technology footprint. Collaborations with consumer goods manufacturers and packaging companies support both license agreements and offtake contracts for PureCycle Resin, reinforcing the company’s mission to facilitate a circular economy for polypropylene.
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