Scientists have opened the UK’s first facility that can recycle plastic waste from research labs.
Every year researchers use millions of pieces of plastic equipment. To avoid contaminating experiments, they are used once and then discarded.
A new start-up company, founded by a graduate from the University of Bath, is recycling them for safe reuse.
Dr Helen Liang, founder of LabCycle, described the breakthrough as “incredibly exciting”.
Most people never see the plastic waste thrown out of research labs, because few people ever go inside them. But when Helen Liang was researching her PhD, she was appalled how much was just thrown away.
She said: “People around me were asking, if we can recycle the plastics at home, why can’t we recycle the lab plastics – it looks like really good quality.
“We go through bags and bags of them every week.”
Across the world, it is the same story. In all, 5.5 million tonnes of tiny plastic tubes, pipette tips and other lab waste is binned.
Because the plastic has been used with hazardous chemicals or biological agents, they’re nearly all incinerated, according to Dr John Husband, an expert in plastic recycling at The University of Bath.
He explained: “So that’s just a load of plastic we’ve taken up from the ground, and we’re burning up into the atmosphere, causing pollution.”
Dr Helen Liang was determined to find a way to recycle the plastic. She discovered that waste companies are “scared” of the toxic chemicals and biological agents the plastic parts have been exposed to.
“So they don’t know what to do,” she told me.
“But we aren’t scared of them because we work with them all the time.”