Uflex Announces Launch of New Global Initiative ‘Project Plastic Fix,’ Screens ‘The Hudson Project’ Documentary with Plastic Patrol


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“Project Plastic Fix advocates the message that the problem of plastic is fixable, achievable and there will come a time when we will look back and not believe that this problem ever existed.” – Anantshree Chaturvedi, vice-chairman and CEO, FlexFilms International

UFlex, one of the largest polymer plastic companies in the world, and Plastic Patrol, an international movement that combines crowdsourcing and community activism to address single-use plastic pollution, recently screened the short documentary “The Hudson Project” at the Core Club in New York City. Along with the film screening, the event highlighted the importance of open and productive conversation around plastic pollution to help identify solutions; included a panel discussion between Anantshree Chaturvedi, Vice-chairman & CEO of FlexFilms International and environmentalist Lizzie Carr, founder of Plastic Patrol; and announced the launch of UFlex Group’s new global initiative, “Project Plastic Fix.”

According to Carr, in just the last two years, Plastic Patrol has conducted hundreds of cleanups, reaching thousands of people globally and removing more than 320 ton bags of trash from the natural world. “The Hudson Project” follows her 170-mile paddle boarding expedition to draw attention to plastic pollution in America. Carr is dedicated to using her journeys to capture important data that educates the public on environmental issues and informs industry and government to find solutions to tackling the plastic crisis.

“We are just scratching the surface by litter picking,” Carr said. Through the Plastic Patrol app, trash collected on Plastic Patrol cleanups is documented and categorized. All data is analyzed by partner sciences to inform and develop solutions to the pollution problem. “Coupled with on the ground activism, crowdsourcing through the Plastic Patrol app is a way of understanding the type, location and amount of plastic we are finding. This gives us better knowledge of the trends and patterns we need to address this problem effectively and with the urgency it requires.”

What started as one person has become a global community, said Carr. In fact, the Plastic Patrol app now has more than 250,000 pieces of garbage logged across 68 countries. “Community is at the heart of Plastic Patrol and that’s what we are building, a like-minded community of people that truly care about this issue which ultimately is what will drive change. This is a global problem that requires global change – and this has to come at every level including industry and government. One person can make a difference, but it will take systemic change to solve the problem.”

Project Plastic Fix by UFlex: Keeping Plastic in the Economy and Out of the Environment

“Lizzie is trying to eradicate single use plastic from nature – where it isn’t supposed to be, and as a plastics manufacturer, we are trying to achieve the same goal,” said Chaturvedi. “We believe that plastic is a problem that can be solved – it’s a global catastrophic risk that we can put behind us, but we have to engineer ourselves out of the problem. Although it’s a challenge, there are avenues, but technology alone isn’t enough. It will take a combination of technology, plastic and people to solve this problem. Corporate choices and citizen behavior are part of the solution.”

To that end, UFlex has launched Project Plastic Fix, a pioneering sustainability initiative designed to clean up plastic waste and convert it into products that have an economic value. In essence, “waste becomes wealth.” UFlex will eradicate plastic waste in four distinct ways through a mix of various methodologies it already practices, such as, recycling plastic waste into granules further used to make over 10,000 household and industrial products like road dividers, outdoor furniture, dustbins and many more useful articles; reprocessing plastic waste into fuel through a process called Pyrolysis that emits zero greenhouse emission; collecting and converting plastic bottle waste into green, up to 100% PCR grade packaging film AsclepiusTM; and converting plastic waste into 100% biodegradable biomass. UFlex’s Project Plastic Fix is the only project in the world that shall have the technology to make plastic recyclable as well as biodegradable.

Also making Project Plastic Fix unique and different is that waste collection will be done by individuals directly engaged by UFlex, thus eliminating the “middleman” that typically would see the largest benefit from these transactions. Importantly, Project Plastic Fix contributes to poverty alleviation as the person responsible for collecting and depositing the waste receives the maximum return. To this, Chaturvedi commented, “Waste collection is more about economic value. When we think of waste management as an unimportant thing, it becomes a burden on all those who have to deal with it.”

The initiative is being piloted in India, Poland and Mexico, to begin with. UFlex will be looking at additional locations along the U.S. East Coast and in the United Kingdom later.

“I believe that while plastic cannot be removed from everyday living, it can be used responsibly. We can have a solution to use the plastic that the world has already manufactured and ensure that it gets recycled and reused in the economy, in a variety of ways, without affecting the ecology,” added Chaturvedi. “Project Plastic Fix advocates the message that the problem of plastic is fixable, achievable and there will come a time when we will look back and not believe that this problem ever existed.”

Emphasizing the issue of human behavior that adds to the plastic waste menace, Chaturvedi concluded, “A change in the way the consumer thinks and behaves will make a lot of difference. With Project Plastic Fix, the only requirement from the consumer will be waste sorting, while the rest can still be addressed with UFlex’s four different approaches. Just by making the small effort of segregating our waste before disposing it, makes it a lot simpler for companies like us to make sure all falls into the right place. But these changes by consumers need to be made today!”

Photo ID: (L-R) Anantshree Chaturvedi, Lizzie Carr, and moderator Erich Walsh

About UFlex

UFlex is one of the largest polymer plastic companies in the world and India’s largest multinational flexible packaging materials and solution company. Founded in 1985, UFlex has state-of-the-art packaging facilities at multiple locations in India with installed capacity of around 1,35,000 tonnes per annum; and packaging film manufacturing facilities in India, United Arab Emirates, Mexico, Egypt, Poland and the United States. Integrated within its core business profile are allied businesses such as aseptic liquid packaging, engineering, cylinders, holography and chemicals which further give UFlex a superior edge over competition. The company serves markets in more than 140 countries.

UFlex offers technologically superior packaging solutions for a wide variety of products such as snack foods, candy and confectionery, sugar, rice and other cereals, beverages, tea and coffee, dessert mixes, noodles, wheat flour, soaps and detergents, shampoos and conditioners, vegetable oil, spices, marinades and pastes, cheese and dairy products, frozen food, sea food, meat, anti-fog, pet food, pharmaceuticals, contraceptives, garden fertilizers and plant nutrients, motor oil and lubricants, automotive and engineering components etc. The company recently won Dow’s 2018 30th Awards for Packaging Innovation and the Sustainability Awards 2018.

About Lizzie Carr

Lizzie Carr (a.k.a., “Lizzie Outside”) is an environmental activist, adventurer, author, social media personality and the founder of non-profit plastic pollution control organization Plastic Patrol. In May 2016, she made history by becoming the first person to paddle board the length of England’s waterways, solo and unsupported. She completed the 400-mile journey in 22 days, plotting more than 3,000 photos of plastic waste she encountered. In May 2017 she became the first female to solo stand up paddle board across the English Channel, a record breaking seven-hour long crossing highlighting micro-plastic contamination in our oceans. In September 2018, Carr took her activism to America and became the first person to successfully paddle board the tidal Hudson River — all 170 miles over eight days. To date, Carr and her army of volunteers globally have removed more than 300-ton bags of garbage from nature and an additional 200,000 examples across 65 countries globally have been logged through crowdsourcing on the interactive Plastic Patrol app. In the last year alone Carr’s campaigning efforts have reached more than 44 million people globally through widespread media support. In 2018 she also released her first book “Paddling Britain” to inspire and motivate people to explore the United Kingdom’s waterways and coastal areas by paddle board.

Media Contact:

Karen Ravensbergen / Irene Zampetoulas

Caryl Communications

201/796-7788

karen@caryl.com/ irene@caryl.com

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