
The oil and gas giant said it plans to add new pyrolysis units at the sites, increasing capacity by 350 million pounds (159,000 tonnes) per year and bringing its total capacity to 500 million pounds (227,000 tonnes) per year. ExxonMobil aims to reach 1 billion pounds (454,000 tonnes) year of recycling capacity globally by 2027.
Currently, the Baytown chemical recycling site is capable of processing 40,000 tonnes of mixed plastic waste per year. The facility started operations in 2022 and has since processed 70 million pounds (32,000 tonnes) of plastic waste using pyrolysis technology.
State Attorney General Rob Bonta claims the company has “engaged in a decades-long campaign of deception that caused and exacerbated the global plastics pollution crisis,” the state said in announcing the Sept. 23 legal action.
Bonta wants the court to order ExxonMobil to create and fund an abatement program and order the company to stop all allegedly deceptive statements regarding plastics operations. This includes “referring to its operations and products by the terms ‘advanced recycling,’ ‘chemical recycling,’ ‘circular,’ ‘certified circular polymers,’ and ‘recyclable,'” the lawsuit states.
The attorney general also seeks the company to protect against and prevent further pollution, impairment and destruction of natural resources. The lawsuit further seeks a litany of civil penalties.
ExxonMobil issued a short reaction to the lawsuit, essentially telling the state of California not to blame the company for its own misdeeds.
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