What if the breakthrough in plastic recycling doesn’t come from higher temperatures or bigger reactors — but from biology?
In this episode of Plastic. Climate. Future., we speak with Oliver Borek from Entzimatiko, a company developing a novel enzymatic technology that goes beyond conventional chemical recycling.
Their approach combines enzyme engineering, nano-encapsulation, and oxidation in a single-step process — operating at ambient conditions and targeting even the toughest materials, including polyolefins.
We explore:
Why polyolefins have long been considered “uncrackable” — and what may be changing
How enzymatic machinery differs from pyrolysis and hydrothermal methods
What low-temperature, solvent-free processing could mean for cost and scalability
Why competitiveness with fossil equivalents is critical for real impact
The roadmap to commercial scale by 2030
A fascinating conversation about science, risk, and what it takes to move breakthrough technology from lab to market.
If circularity is to scale, innovation must go beyond incremental change. This episode dives into what that could look like.
🎧 Listen now on Spotify or Apple Podcasts!
情報
- 番組
- 頻度アップデート:週2回
- 配信日2026年2月19日 12:00 UTC
- 長さ53分
- シーズン4
- エピソード2
- 制限指定不適切な内容を含まない
