News and Information for the vehicle recycling industry

    • News from previous months

    • Archives

  • CONTACT
  • ABOUT
  • NEWSLETTER
  • INDIA WEBINAR
  • CANADA WEBINAR
  • IRT
Sabhi banner (compact): “Sabhi logo and ‘Open Sabhi. Make more money.’ on blue background with ‘Join the waitlist’ button.

Automotive plastics pilot proves technical feasibility, exposes value chain gap

GIC Automotive Plastics Circularity Pilot Report – Assessing the technical feasibility of recycling ELVs

The GIC automotive plastics pilot shows that recycling plastics from end-of-life vehicles is technically feasible, but not yet commercially proven. The real barrier is not recovery technology, but the lack of an aligned value chain linking OEMs, dismantlers, waste managers and chemical producers to make ELV plastics circularity work at scale.

Industrial shredder grab lifting an end-of-life vehicle, showing exposed components during dismantling and material recovery for recycling.
Image credit: Shutterstock

The Global Impact Coalition recently published findings from the first automotive plastics circularity pilot initiated by the chemical industry.

Every year, more than 800,000 tonnes of plastic from end-of-life vehicles are incinerated or landfilled in Europe alone. The pathway to addressing this is understood, but the system to deliver it at scale does not yet exist.

Eight companies – BASF, Covestro, LG Chem, LyondellBasell, Mitsubishi Chemical Group, SABIC, SUEZ and Syensqo – collaborated pre-competitively to process 100 end-of-life vehicles (ELVs) through a full dismantling, shredding and sorting chain, recovering approximately 8 metric tonnes of plastic from vehicles of different ages, makes and conditions.

What the pilot confirms

The pilot establishes technical feasibility. Plastic components can be recovered from end-of-life vehicles and processed into material suitable for recycling. However, commercial viability remains to be established. The primary barrier is not technology – it is coordination, economics, and the absence of a value chain framework that aligns incentives across all actors: OEMs, dismantlers, waste management companies, and chemical producers.

As GIC CEO Charlie Tan notes in the report foreword: “Closing the loop on automotive plastics is no longer a question of ambition, it is a question of execution.”

Why this matters now

New EU regulation is raising the stakes significantly. New cars must contain 25% recycled plastic by 2036, with at least 20% sourced from closed-loop vehicle recycling. The current closed-loop share stands at approximately 2.5%. The gap is considerable, as is the opportunity.

The pressure is not limited to Europe. China processed more than 7.9 million end-of-life vehicles in 2024 and launched a national action plan in December 2025 targeting increased recycled material use in automotive manufacturing by 2030. The challenge and the opportunity is global.

What comes next

These findings will shape the next phase of work by unlocking the ELV recycling value chain by evaluating economic viability. This will be done by developing component specific scenario modelling, and key experiments on automation, chemical recycling, and design for recycling.

Download the full report here.

Source www.globalimpactcoalition.com

Further Reading on Auto Recycling World

Join the Auto Recycling Newsletter for expert news, policy updates and best practice in auto recycling

Facebook
LinkedIn
X
Banner promoting IARC 2026 (International Automotive Recycling Congress), 25–27 March 2026 in Hamburg, Germany, with the tagline “One ticket. Full access to congress, exhibition & plant tours” and a “Register now” button.