Make Waste Beautiful: Smile Plastics Expands With New Wales Factory
Key Highlights:
- Smile Plastics expands its production with a new, larger facility in Wales, closer to Swansea.
- Smile Plastics uses proprietary technology to transform plastic waste into 100% recycled, 100% recyclable plastic panels for architects, designers and brands around the world.
- Thanks to the move they have the potential to divert over 3,000 tonnes annually – the potential to convert almost 40 tonnes of 100% recycled material every seven days.
Of the 400 million tonnes of plastic that the world produces every year, less than 10% is currently recycled. From its base in Wales, Smile Plastics has been on a mission to change these numbers since 2015.
Originally founded in the 1990s, Smile Plastics uses proprietary technology to transform plastic waste into 100% recycled, 100% recyclable plastic panels for architects, designers and brands around the world. Taking materials that would usually be consigned to landfill – everything from yoghurt pots to fridge-freezers–Smile Plastics selects and blends plastic waste to create beautiful and functional architectural surfaces that can be used for a host of applications, from countertops and shower panels to furniture and signage.
New factory increases production capacity by 200%
Until recently, the company was converting around 500 tonnes of plastic waste into circular products – the equivalent of 62.5 million 500ml PET bottles. Now, thanks to a move to a new, larger factory close to Swansea on the Gower Peninsula, Smile Plastics has increased its production capacity threefold, and now has the potential to divert over 3,000 tonnes annually–producing more than 3003m x 1.2m sheets each week–converting almost 40 tonnes of 100% recycled material every seven days.
Capacity was not the only consideration behind the move. Smile Plastics’ relationship with South Wales has always been central to the business, and the company was determined to maintain its locally focused talent, community and supply chains through the move. In addition, the natural magnificence of the surrounding landscape serves as an everyday reminder of Smile Plastics’ mission.
Adam Fairweather, director, Smile Plastics, said: “Wales is central to the Smile Plastics story. The fact that the Gower Peninsula was the first Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in the UK aligns perfectly with our company's values. Beauty drives our creative direction, yet waste – especially plastic – is a scourge on the landscape and our environmental wellbeing.
"To maintain the landscape, we as a society must address our waste disposal and processing. If we as a company can highlight the desirability of recycling plastic not only in practice but also in the aesthetics and performance of the results we can deliver, we can nudge the dial closer to solving the problem of plastic, and permanently change the way we think about waste.”
Cradle-to-cradle manufacture
Since its original technology was developed in the 1990s, Smile Plastics has led its sector in the drive towards a circular economy, and today serves as a proven template for a low-energy, waste-efficient manufacturing model. The move to a larger facility–in what was once Wales’ biggest chocolate factory–has opened up the space and resources necessary to implement more extensive quality checks across the production line, and optimise process efficiency, enabling Smile Plastics to turn around larger orders within much shorter timeframes.
Today, Smile Plastics has the capacity to operate 24-hour continuous batch production, seven days a week.
The new factory diverts plastic waste from more than 60 local businesses around Swansea and beyond, and works in partnership with community groups and organisations including Cwm Environmental and Swansea Environmental Centre, to source raw materials and tackle specific waste streams.
Plastics are sorted and graded by colour and polymer type, then shredded, heated and pressed into sheets. The type and colour of raw materials determines the pattern of the finished panel, which can be everything from a sober, natural stone mimic to a maximalist eruption of colour, making the panels suitable for a wide variety of applications. (One of Smile Plastic’s popular styles, Alba, is flecked with silver, thanks to the fact it is made from yoghurt pots – 111 million in 2022, in fact.)
As well as being recycled, Smile Plastics products are also designed to be fully recyclable – a cradle-to-cradle production cycle. Used panels can simply be returned to the beginning of the process, as can any waste plastics or substandard materials generated during manufacture and cutting. The company operates a buy-back service to facilitate return and recycling, making Smile Plastics panels especially well suited to temporary uses in events and exhibitions.
Measuring environmental performance
- Smile Plastics’ carbon footprint is well below 0.5 kgCO2e – far less than plywood, particleboard or solid surface and under 1/6 that of most of its nearest competitors.
- From raw material to factory gate, Smile Plastics panels use a fraction of the water consumed by manufacturers using primary (virgin) materials.
- Smile Plastics’ exclusive focus on secondary materials means that its production processes consume minimal natural resources and minerals.
Smile Plastics is also proud to hold ISO 14001 accreditation, reflecting its continuing commitment to responsible waste management. To ensure health and wellbeing of people and the planet, all ‘at risk’ waste material is tested for Persistent Organic Pollutants, which enables Smile Plastics to confidently operate within REACH compliance. In addition, the matt factory finish applied to Smile Plastics products requires no sanding or polishing, which greatly reduces the potential for microplastics pollution at factory level.
Smile Plastics continues to monitor and refine its materials, processes and supply chains to optimise environmental performance, and is currently exploring the possibilities of establishing a decentralised network of factories in Europe and globally, increasing in scale without compromising on quality, aesthetics or environmental performance.
Rosalie McMillan, director, Smile Plastics, added: “Our Swansea factory is a blueprint for replication around the world. This approach meets our international customer base’s desire for localised manufacture and supports a sustainable future, minimising carbon impact from shipping and harnessing the localised waste streams at a global scale. Our mission is to create a conscious community on a global scale–by decentralising manufacture of 100% recycled products, we can achieve this.”