March 29, 2021
Sustainability

Trinseo and BASF jointly announce Business Collaboration on Circular Feedstock

Trinseo (NYSE: TSE) and BASF announce today the intention to expand their businesses with the production of styrene based on circular feedstock.  The enhanced collaboration between Trinseo and BASF aims to increase efforts by both companies in the development and management of styrene featuring an improved environmental profile.

Trinseo has procured first supplies of styrene based on two different kinds of circular feedstock from BASF for use in styrene butadiene rubber and polystyrene products. Both types of styrene are manufactured by BASF based on a mass balance approach at the company’s Verbund site in Ludwigshafen, Germany.    Print free of charge Copyright by BASF
BASF Verbund site in Ludwigshafen, Germany
Trinseo has recently been procuring first supplies of the synthetical chemical styrene based on circular feedstock from BASF for use in its Solution-Styrene Butadiene Rubber (S-SBR) and polystyrene (PS) products. Trinseo supplies S-SBR to major tires manufacturers while its PS products are used in applications such as food packaging and appliances. The first few customers have already processed the material.
“By creating synergy across the value chain, the Trinseo-BASF collaboration is an important move towards helping our customers reach their sustainability goals as well as the development of a truly circular economy,” said Nicolas Joly, Vice President, Plastics & Feedstocks of Trinseo. “The initiative is also in line with Trinseo’s 2030 Sustainability Goals announced earlier this year.”
“CO2 emission reduction and a circular economy are BASF’s paramount targets. Using circular feedstocks instead of virgin fossil resources contributes directly or indirectly to an improved CO2 footprint of subsequent products,” says Klaus Ries, Vice President for BASF’s Styrenics Business Europe. “While our customer Trinseo procures biomass balanced (BMB) styrene for their downstream business already, styrene Ccycled™ will be available in the near future”.

Two types of mass balanced styrene

There are two types of styrene BASF can produce with a mass balance approach – renewable feedstock based-styrene and styrene based on chemically recycled feedstock. Mass balance is a chain of custody model designed to keep track of the total amount of input (e. g. circular feedstock) throughout the production cycle and ensure an appropriate allocation to the finished goods. Both of these alternative feedstocks replace a certain amount of virgin fossil resources at the beginning of the value chain - leading to a reduction of CO2 emissions.

To produce BMB styrene, BASF replaces fossil resources like naphtha or natural gas by renewable feedstocks derived from organic waste or vegetable oils.  When manufacturing Ccycled™ products, BASF uses pyrolysis oil derived from plastic waste that is not recycled mechanically, e.g., mixed household waste or end-of-life tires, as a feedstock, thus contributing to plastics circularity.

With this approach Trinseo and BASF can offer products with a better environmental profile and the same properties as those manufactured from fossil feedstock.  The allocation process via the mass balance approach as well as the products are certified by an independent auditor. Read more about BASF’s ChemCycling™ project here.

icon_partnering.gif
Birgit Hellmann
Global Sustainability Communications
Trinseo has procured first supplies of styrene based on two different kinds of circular feedstock from BASF for use in styrene butadiene rubber and polystyrene products. Both types of styrene are manufactured by BASF based on a mass balance approach at the company’s Verbund site in Ludwigshafen, Germany.    Print free of charge Copyright by BASF

Trinseo and BASF announce collaboration on circular feedstock for styrene

Trinseo has procured first supplies of styrene based on two different kinds of circular feedstock from BASF for use in styrene butadiene rubber and polystyrene products. Both types of styrene are manufactured by BASF based on a mass balance approach at the company’s Verbund site in Ludwigshafen, Germany.  

Last Update March 29, 2021