Forbes India - Startups, Environment: Banyan Nation: Recycling At Scale

2022-05-28 15:36:08 By : Ms. SCD Cassie

Mani Vajipey (left), CEO, and Raj Madangopal, who is COO of Banyan Nation. Image: Vikas Chandra Pureti for Forbes India Multiple startups are applying innovation to address various aspects of sustainability and pollution, and creating new-age products with multiple use cases. Read about some key companies here. I n a nation where recycling activities are relegated to a fragmented informal sector, leading to mismanagement of valuable materials and creating enormous marine and terrestrial litter, Banyan Nation is one of India’s first vertically integrated plastic recycling companies. It uses its proprietary technology platform to integrate thousands of informal workers into its supply chain and produces premium-quality recycled polyolefin plastics (PE and PP) for mainstream and high-quality applications. Related stories CarbonCraft Design: Turning tyres into tiles and homes Pi Green Innovations: Filtering air without a filter How GE plans to pitch a tent in India's renewables story Banyan claims it is the only company that has its recycled polyolefin materials certified for use in everyday human contact packaging applications such as shampoo, lotion and detergent bottles. Its recycled plastics meet US and EU packaging and plastics safety standards. The raw materials are sourced from a 100 percent traceable supply chain. In the past 12 months, over 300 million FMCG bottles have been produced from Banyan’s recycled plastic. Among its clients are Hindustan Unilever, Reckitt, Shell and HPCL. The company was winner for the World Economic Forum Global Technology Pioneers (2021), Circulars Award at the World Economic Forum (2018 Intel-DST Award Innovations for Digital India (2017), Millennium Alliance Grant (2016), and mBillionth Award (2015). Its facility in Hyderabad proves that high-quality recycling is possible, at scale, and in an environmentally and socially responsible way. Its installed capacity is less than 1 percent of the forecast demand for recycled plastics in 2025. “We are scaling up our plastics washing technology to develop premium-quality recycled plastics in injection, blow and extrusion grade materials for applications across diverse industries,” says co-founder Mani Vajipey. “Our goal is to achieve scale and profitability while staying true to our core mission of solving the menace of plastic pollution and creating lasting environmental and social impact,” adds Vajipey. The company aims to have an installed capacity of 50,000 tonnes by 2024. The founders believe that collaborations with other startups, large corporations, policymakers, and customers can bring about a systemic and seismic shift in how Indians view plastics, and how the world views India—as a trailblazer in sustainability.

Click here to see Forbes India's comprehensive coverage on the Covid-19 situation and its impact on life, business and the economy​

Check out our end of season subscription discounts with a Moneycontrol pro subscription absolutely free. Use code EOSO2021. Click here for details.

(This story appears in the 03 June, 2022 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)

For hassle free instant subscription, just give your number and email id and our customer care agent will get in touch with you

click here to Subscribe Online

Photo of the day: All eyes on you

Our top reads of the week

Sex toys are going green

Big tech is getting clobbered on Wall Street. It's a good time for them

How does it end? Fissures emerge over what constitutes victory in Ukraine

From Japan to Zambia, the push for paid menstrual leave

Taiwan man invents stroller for fish to 'explore other worlds'

Indian film industry seeks new horizons in Cannes

Tether launches a stablecoin pegged to Pesos on Ethereum, Tron and Polygon

Barcelona recruits sheep and goats to fight wildfires

Who is protected against monkeypox?

Twitter's chief tries staying the course as Elon Musk upends plans

Fed Vice chair speaks about the potential of CBDCs and the future of stablecoins

JPMorgan trials private blockchain for collateral settlement

Of superheroes and the threat of a global recession