Rupees 800 million plan turns PET bottle flakes into polyester yarn in Sri Lanka

The BPPL looks forward to the diversification of its business lines into synthetic filament extrusion for other brush manufacturing and polyester yarn production for fabric mills for both local and export markets would become dominant contributors to group’s financials over the medium term.

Dr. Amarasinghe disclosed that BPPL is planning to invest around Rupees.1-1.5 billion in another state-of-the-art yarn production plant at the same premises expanding production to meet local as well as to meet export demand. Meanwhile, BPPL expects to double the used PET bottle collection to 400 tonnes per month within the next 12 months.

According to Dr. Amarasinghe, BPPL collects nearly 200-250 tonnes of PET waste amounting to approximately 20 percent virgin PET imports into Sri Lanka.

The polyester yarn plant is also equipped to produce recycled yarn, which is considered a niche segment with a good growth potential. The facility will manufacture polyester yarn from recycled Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) bottle flakes. BPPL also had earlier invested in a Rupees.200 million bottle-washing plant at the same premises and it has also installed a water treatment plant where used water is treated and re-used with only 5 percent of water being discharged. According to the latest BPPL annual report, it had secured a term loan to the value of Rupees 536.34 million from HSBC and another to the tune of Rupees 40.65 million from HNB for the yarn plant and machinery.

Speaking at the inauguration event BPPL CEO/Managing Director, Dr. Anush Amarasinghe said the state-of-the-art plant will bring Sri Lanka’s apparel industry one step closer to the backward integration process, while noting that the global apparel industry is increasingly moving from supplying cotton-based apparels to polyester, as it’s more versatile and less expensive.

The ribbon cutting ceremony

“Most of the fabric plants are utilising cotton, but the growth is in polyester yarn,” he said. He also highlighted that this plant is one of two plants in the world that create yarn directly from flakes circumventing the polymerization where flakes are first converted to chips and then to yarn. He added that, “The factory’s state-of-the-art spinning and texturing machinery from Europe will make it a game-changer for the industry.”

He noted that 70 tonnes of recycled PET waste will be utilised for manufacturing synthetic yarn while around 150 tonnes of PET waste for the production of synthetic brush filaments.

Dr. Amarasinghe said the newly launched polyester yarn production plant can produce 15 percent of the polyester yarn demanded by the local apparel industry. However, with the yarn plant in the pipeline, he said BPPL will significantly increase yarn production for the local apparel sector in future. Also, “By sourcing polyester yarn from Sri Lanka, fabric manufacturers can significantly reduce lead times and also lower inventory costs,” he said. According to BPPL, the polyester yarn of 10 recycled PET bottles is sufficient to make a t-shirt. The BPPL has targeted the fabric mills of industry leaders such as MAS, Hirdaramani, Brandix as well as Hayleys while it is also looking at exporting to countries such as Taiwan.

Dr. Amarasinghe added that, “Depending on the customer requirement, this plant can produce either virgin or recycled yarn.”

A wholly owned subsidiary of BPPL Holdings Ltd (BPPL), Eco Spindles, inaugurated Sri Lanka’s first ever polyester yarn plant at Horana Export Processing Zone with a Rupees 800 million investment.

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