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This study on “Recycling Plastic Wastes: Sustainable Product Strategy for Bangladesh”
proposes an approach to explore the feasibility of a sustainable plastic waste recycling industry
in Bangladesh. A feasible plastics recycling industry mostly envisages two predominant
targets: 1) Economic gain and 2) Environment sustainability.
In terms of economic gain, the noteworthy impact of the plastic recycling industry could
definitely improve Bangladesh’s balance of trade by reducing dependence on virgin plastic raw
material imports as well as producing value-added products which will increase the economic
competitiveness of plastic manufacturers & marketers, increase export potential, and create
new jobs, enhance working environments, particularly for actors of the informal sector.
In the context of environmental sustainability, the environmental benefits of using recycled
plastics can be immense since it diverts plastic waste away from landfills and has a nominal
carbon footprint compared to the plastic recycling industry's significant impact could be
positive to lighten prevailing plastic pollution, which can eventually provide a more sustainable
alternative to virgin plastic raw materials for producing raw materials for the production of
materials and is resource-efficient in production.
This study is consequential in the contemporary world swamped with plastic waste. The study
offers a comprehensive evaluation of the current state of plastic waste recycling in Bangladesh
as well as benchmarking the factors explicit to the recycling companies in Bangladesh and
other successful recycling companies in the world with recommendations for establishing an
economically viable and environmentally sustainable plastic waste recycling sector in
Bangladesh. This is exploratory research. The study includes in-depth qualitative analysis,
verifiable data from reliable sources, and projections of current plastic market trends and future
possibilities compiled through extensive primary, secondary, and tertiary research where the
primary research is done through open field interviews, in-depth expert interviews,
observations, and case studies. The open field interviews are based on the value chain actors
of plastic waste recycling in Bangladesh and the sample groups are heterogeneous, based on
purposive (waste collectors, middle dealers) and convenience (wholesale dealers, recyclers)
sampling. The respondents include waste collectors, middle dealers, wholesale dealers and
recyclers. The study has adopted the case study method of purposeful case selection and has
selected large and notable plastic recycling business models across the world to find the critical
success factors and the possible replication option from Bangladesh’s perspective. The analysis
is structured using the Business Model Canvas (BMC) framework as developed by Alexander
Osterwalder and Pigneur (2010) and the Lowell Center Framework for Sustainable Products
(Sally Edward, 2010) by following the Circular Economy Business Model Case Studies
developed by the R2Pi project of the European Union in 2017. The study has reviewed and
analyzed 250 previous studies of similar fields done by different researchers across the globe
by focusing on literature sources, insights, and key drivers of the kinds of literature. Interviews
with industry experts and the organization’s personnel have provided primary information that
facilitated the analysis of the business model of the Circular Economy. The analysis is mainly exploratory which is based on open field interviews, case studies, expert interviews, and
literature reviews.
The research addresses the general concept of plastic and plastic waste recycling, prevailing
value chain investigation, exploration of global practices, and assessing the prospect and
opportunities for replication of the business model in Bangladesh on a circular economy notion.
The broad research objective is to explore the feasibility of a sustainable plastic waste recycling
industry in Bangladesh. The operational objectives of the study are: 1) To evaluate the current
state of the plastic waste recycling value chain; 2) To study the existing plastic waste recycling
industry for replication and scalability of the business model on the circular economy
principles; 3) To formulate a sustainable product strategy from recycled plastic waste in
Bangladesh.
A conceptual framework has been developed coping with a “system-thinking approach”
(OECD, 2017) focusing on the plastic recycling value chain that involves a multitude of actors
from the collection, transport, dismantling, sorting, and finally to recycling & product
manufacturing from a circular economy perspective.
Open field interviews and expert interviews revealed that the plastic recycling industry in
Bangladesh is highly polluting in its current state due to the informal sector’s dominance,
inferior feedstock quality, lack of funding, substandard recycling technology, waste treatment
infrastructure, and thus throwing away the opportunities to extract ultimate benefits. On the
contrary, developed countries are far ahead of Bangladesh because of the vibrant informal
sector, strong recycling infrastructure, superior quality feedstock, and advanced technology
with adequate funding as revealed from case studies and literature reviews.
Finally, this study recommends the main priorities to be addressed to develop a feasible plastics
recycling industry in Bangladesh; 1) Recyclable plastic waste escalation in terms of value and
volume; 2) Integrate informal sector actors into the mainstream economy to improve the
effectiveness of collection, sorting, and segregation and legitimize their identity and profession;
3) Form and Institutionalize the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) structure towards
funding for the growth and development of recycling infrastructure; 4) Inspire innovation, and
match recyclers with prospective business opportunities by establishing a transparent and
viable secondary raw material marketplace. However, a joint and coordinated approach is
required among all where policymakers, researchers, students, industry experts, social activists,
international donors, and businesses interested and engaged in the transition toward a circular
plastics economy are the intended audiences. |
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