Plastic Regrind – The triple threat
Save money, material and reduce waste
The triple threat of plastic regrind saves money, materials, and reduces waste. We are in a pandemic era where every business move has to include some big changes. 2021 will continue to provide interesting opportunities for plastic manufacturers as Covid ramifications accumulate.
Price increase in Plastics is putting significant stress on consumers, as Covid-19 disrupts international trade and creates high levels of demand and inconsistent supply capabilities. A business’s agility in response to the environment within which it operates, is constantly being tested and one of the reasons a business either achieves new heights of success or ends up in a loop of inefficacy can be equate to how inventively resources are managed by the business.
As a local manufacture Ampa Plastics Group has built a reputation in the industry for providing quality regrind products, ranging from Polycarbonate chair mats to High Density Polystyrene (HDPE), and Polypropylene layer boards. We are an organization that strives to run production in a way that echoes sustainability.
Plastic regrind is excess material that is collected and ground into much smaller granules called regrind. Plastic scraps are recaptured during the manufacturing process from producing plastic sheets and profiles and repurposed into usable material.
Whether it is relying on our Solar assets to draw back the electricity bill or repurposing plastic regrind into new products. Our focus is to optimize the utilization of resources and maximize their productivity in our factory. AMPA Plastics Group uses plastic regrind to reduce costs and manage natural resources, while simultaneously enforcing the “3 R’s” to reduce plastic waste, reuse scraps, and recycle the rest through selling regrind to buyers that recycle the regrind into other plastic applications.