Production factory with bright lights at night
Sustainability

Sustainability

BASF is a member of the global Alliance to End Plastic Waste

The Alliance to End Plastic Waste (AEPW) is made up of nearly fifty major global companies. They have committed over $1.0 billion with the goal of investing $1.5 billion over the next five years to develop, deploy and bring to scale solutions that will minimize and manage plastic waste and promote post-use solutions. These can be recycling, reuse and repurposing of plastic to keep it out of the environment. BASF supports this initiative as a co-founding member since a collaborative effort of companies, governmental and non-governmental organizations as well as civil society is necessary to address the global challenge of mismanaged plastic waste.

AEPW Progress Report

In this report, you can learn more about the Alliance to end plastic waste and some of the partner projects that are preventing plastic waste leaking into the environment, capturing the value of plastic waste and supporting communities around the world.

 

 

PreviewPDF (10.95 MB)
Man in a navy shirt holding dirty plastic cups on the beach
BASF supports Global Cleanup campaign

As part of its commitment to the Alliance to End Plastic Waste (AEPW), BASF supported AEPW’s All Together Global Cleanup campaign, a global initiative to remove litter from the environment, one piece at a time, on World Cleanup Day 2020. On September 19, employees engaged in two physical cleanup events in Ludwigshafen as part of the volunteer’s day and in Shanghai.

For everyone who wants to engage in the cleanup campaign, AEPW is offering to use the Litterati app, when individually collecting litter.

Please visit the following link for more information on the AllTogetherGlobalCleanup.org campaign. Enjoy educational videos and corresponding curriculum on the partnership microsite with TedEd

Plastics provide health, safety, sustainability and convenience benefits. They contribute to improving living standards, hygiene and nutrition around the world, especially in developing countries. But plastic waste does not belong in our oceans, rivers or anywhere in our environment. There are two challenges at the heart of the plastic waste issue: lack of adequate infrastructure and systems to collect and manage household and municipal waste, and that society does not recognize waste as a valuable resource. 

Research by the Ocean Conservancy shows that plastics in the ocean predominantly originate from litter on land. Most of the plastic waste is spread through rivers and can be traced back to ten major rivers around the world, mainly in Asia and Africa. Many of these rivers flow through densely populated areas which have a lack of adequate waste collection and recycling infrastructure, leading to significant waste leakage. Once in the environment, it becomes difficult to capture. The AEPW will initiate actions where they are most needed.

We strongly support the aim to reduce plastic waste in the environment. We are co-founding the Alliance to End Plastic Waste, because we want to drive and promote solutions that will effectively help solve the world's plastic waste problem.
Vorsitzender des Vorstands und Chief Technology Officer der BASF SE: Legal, Taxes, Insurance & Intellectual Property; Corporate Development; Corporate Communications & Government Relations; Senior Executive Human Resources; Investor Relations; Compliance; BASF 4.0; Corporate Technology & Operational Excellence; Digitalization in Research & Development; Innovation Management

Martin Brudermüller, CEO of BASF SE

BASF actively supports the four focus areas of AEPW: 

  • Infrastructure development to collect and manage waste and increase recycling
  • Innovation to advance and scale up new technologies that make recycling and recovering plastics easier and create value from post-use plastics
  • Education and engagement of governments, businesses, and communities to mobilize action; 
  • Clean-up of concentrated areas of plastic waste in the environment, particularly the major conduits of waste, such as rivers, that carry land-based waste to the ocean

 

The engagement of BASF in the alliance reinforces the company’s engagement for a responsible handling of plastics. “One important measure to end uncontrolled entry of plastics into the environment is to build up closed circles where plastic can be used as new raw material. The chemical industry plays an important role in innovating and implementing large-scale processes to convert plastic waste into new products,” said Brudermüller. One example of how BASF is working on innovative technologies that promote the recovering and recycling of plastics is its ChemCycling project. Together with its customers and partners, BASF developed and manufactured the first pilot products based on chemically recycled plastic waste. 

The measures and activities of the AEPW commitment contribute to the achievement of several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): 

  • SDG 4 (Quality Education)
  • SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation)
  • SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure)
  • SDG 14 (Life below Water)
  • SDG 17 (Partnerships for the Goals)
News from the AEPW: Global Cleanup Program to Increase Recycling Literacy Launches in Singapore
Ending plastic waste in the environment is a complex challenge. To inspire people towards playing a part in this mission, the Alliance to End Plastic Waste (Alliance) launches Clean4Change—a 150-day global cleanup program to enable sustained community action to end plastic waste. The initiative aims to improve recycling literacy, starting with Singapore.