- UN climate chief urges G20 to spur tense COP29 negotiations
- Philippines warns of 'potentially catastrophic' Super Typhoon Man-yi
- Tens of thousands flee as Super Typhoon Man-yi nears Philippines
- Gabon votes on new constitution hailed by junta as 'turning point'
- Tens of thousands flee as Typhoon Man-yi nears Philippines
- Is Argentina's Milei on brink of leaving Paris climate accord?
- Fitch upgrades Argentina debt rating amid economic pain
- Trump picks Doug Burgum as energy czar in new administration
- At summit under Trump shadow, Xi and Biden signal turbulence ahead
- Xi warns against 'protectionism' at APEC summit under Trump cloud
- Xi, Biden at Asia-Pacific summit under Trump trade war cloud
- Leftist voices seek to be heard at Rio's G20 summit
- Boeing strike will hurt Ethiopian Airlines growth: CEO
- US retail sales lose steam in October after hurricanes
- Spate of child poisoning deaths sparks S.Africa xenophobia
- Comedian Conan O'Brien to host Oscars
- Gore says 'absurd' to hold UN climate talks in petrostates
- Global stocks struggle after Fed signals slower rate cuts
- China tests building Moon base with lunar soil bricks
- Oil execs work COP29 as NGOs slam lobbyist presence
- Gore says climate progress 'won't slow much' because of Trump
- 'Megaquake' warning hits Japan's growth
- Stiff business: Berlin startup will freeze your corpse for monthly fee
- Dominican Juan Luis Guerra triumphs at 25th annual Latin Grammys
- Tropical Storm Sara pounds Honduras with heavy rain
- TikTok makes AI driven ad tool available globally
- Japan growth slows as new PM readies stimulus
- China retail sales pick up speed, beat forecasts in October
- Pakistan's policies hazy as it fights smog
- Mexico City youth grapple with growing housing crisis
- Cracks deepen in Canada's pro-immigration 'consensus'
- Japan's Princess Mikasa, great aunt to emperor, dies aged 101
- Venezuela opposition activist dies in custody
- Policymakers defend Fed independence amid concerns about Trump era
- Lebanon economic losses top $5 billion in year of clashes: World Bank
- Fed Chair calls US the best-performing major economy in the world
- Brother of late Harrods owner also accused of sexual violence: BBC
- New York to revive driver congestion charge plan, drawing Trump ire
- China's Xi arrives in Peru for APEC summit, Biden meeting
- Spain's Vanguardia daily to stop posting on 'disinformation network' X
- New York to revive driver congestion charge plan
- US stocks wobble as traders weigh future Fed cuts
- BHP, Vale cleared by Brazil court over 2015 dam disaster
- Legal migration to OECD reaches new record in 2023
- Central bank independence 'fundamental' for good policy: Fed official
- EU fines Meta $840 million for 'abusive' Facebook ad practices
- Iran tells UN nuclear chief willing to resolve 'ambiguities'
- Coach owner Tapestry calls off Capri bid on regulatory blocks
- EU fines Meta 798 mn euros for Facebook ad antitrust breach
- 'Terrible' AI has given tech an existential headache: activist
'New wave' as start-up sweeps up Thai ocean plastic
As a long-tail boat arrives at a fishing village on the southern Thai island of Koh Chang, residents gather to sell their wares -- not seafood, but plastic.
The villagers, members of the semi-nomadic Moken people, are selling to Tide, a start-up attempting to create new value from old plastic collected from or near the sea.
Recyclers have long scooped up some of the over six million tonnes of plastic that the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development estimates enters the ocean each year.
But Tide works directly with everyone in the process, from collectors in remote Thai fishing villages to carpet manufacturers in the Netherlands.
Its plastic is traceable and certified as "ocean-bound" -- a process that involves annual audits by an NGO.
It is processed using a method Tide says results in a recycled product of comparable quality to virgin plastic.
"We are convinced there is more than enough plastic in our world and we should take what already exists," said Marc Krebs, a co-founder of the Swiss company.
On Koh Chang, a 30-minute speedboat ride from the sleepy southern town of Ranong, the Tide boat's arrival prompts a flurry of activity.
Mimi, 65, has brought out several old rice sacks of bottles that join a growing heap of torn fishing nets, old rope and discarded jerrycans.
"The more I collect, the more arrives. I can't collect it all," she told AFP, declining to give a family name.
The villagers live along the beach in ramshackle wooden homes on stilts.
Underneath, the high tide mark is clear -- behind it is a carpet of refuse, from polystyrene boxes and flip-flops to take-away cups and crisp packets.
Only a small portion is commercially viable for recycling. Tide buys six categories, including fishing nets and common types of plastic bottles (PET) and cartons (HDPE).
"Each day, we have a lot of products that we can't sell and can't recycle, and I'm sure there is much more of it in the ocean," Tide's Thailand operations director, Nirattisai Ponputi, told AFP.
- Onerous sorting -
While the market price of recycled plastic fluctuates, Tide pays a set rate on Koh Chang to encourage continued collection.
And they sometimes take items that can't be recycled because the island has no waste management options, so the alternative is mostly open burning.
Even recyclable items can be challenging.
Bottles with stamped logos must be "hotwashed" before processing, coloured plastic can contaminate recycled material, and most ink-printed labels cannot be recycled.
A PET soft drink bottle might have an HDPE cap and a PVC label, creating an onerous sorting process.
Sometimes it isn't even clear what plastic has been used, so Tide uses a spectrometer to work out what can be recycled.
"There are no regulations about the plastic that you can put in your product, so it's left on the shoulders of the collectors to work it out," said Capucine Paour, Tide's external project manager.
Plastic collected on Koh Chang and surrounding islands goes to Tide's Ranong facility, where workers painstakingly sort it again before pressing it into bales.
Founded in 2019, Tide collects around 1,000 tonnes of plastic a year from Thailand and other locations including Mexico.
"It's still a very small amount" compared to the global scale of the problem, acknowledged Krebs.
- 'Ban is better!' -
The collected plastic is processed into pellets before being shipped to customers like Condor Group, one of Europe's largest carpet manufacturers.
The firm uses recycled material from Tide and elsewhere for around a quarter of its products, including rugs, car mats and artificial grass.
"Tide is really unique," said Jan Hoekman Jr, one of the company's directors.
"You can follow the product from collection to the final products, which you see here. That's all transparent, which is very important if you talk about sustainability."
Tide says its product is 40 percent more expensive than virgin plastic, but customers like Condor Group are willing to pay a premium.
"We see sustainability not just as a trend, but more as stewardship for future generations," said Hoekman Jr.
Condor Group's buzzing production lines feel a million miles from the quiet off-season beaches of Koh Chang, where Wiranuch Scimone, 54, collects plastic for Tide.
In her 20 years on Koh Chang, she has seen the waste washing ashore go from mostly fishing nets to huge amounts of unrecyclable polystyrene foam that locals often end up burning.
The monsoon waves bring in so much trash that she sometimes spends hours on a beach without being able to collect it all.
"It would be best if there were no plastic," she said, adding in English: "Ban is better!"
Tide, a for-profit company, is still a relatively small operation, but it is expanding, moving into Ghana next.
"You have to start somewhere," said Krebs.
"We are quite convinced that we are at the beginning of a new wave."
Ch.Lefebvre--CPN