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Recycling happens only when there is a steady demand for the recycled pellets.
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A: ‘Plastics’ is an umbrella term for various materials with some similar properties. Each type of plastic has a different polymer structure and set of additives. These differences decide how a piece of plastic behaves when it is heated, ground down, and remade, which is why only some kinds can be recycled in practice.Thermoplastics like the PET in water bottles and HDPE in milk jugs soften when heated and harden when cooled. This property allows them to be melted, filtered, and reshaped with limited damage, so they are widely collected. Thermosets like the many epoxy resins and some rubber parts form permanent chemical bonds when they’re first made. They crack rather than melt when heated, so they can’t be recycled by normal heat-based methods.Even among thermoplastics, recycling depends on purity. Labels, food residues, dyes, fillers, flame retardants, and plasticisers change how the melt flows and weakens the final product. Multilayer packaging combines different polymers (for example, PET, polyethylene, and aluminum) to keep food fresh, but these layers are hard to separate, so the item is often not recyclable.Collecting, sorting, washing, and remelting also cost money, so recycling happens only when there is a steady demand for the recycled pellets. Bottles and jugs have large and cleaner waste streams and established buyers whereas many films, foams, and mixed plastics don’t. Newer chemical recycling methods can in principle break polymers to simpler molecules, but they are energy-intensive and not yet broadly deployed. Published – November 11, 2025 04:33 pm IST
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