MATERIALS
Ocean plastic explained
Understand the terminology, material routes and the difference between collected plastic, ocean-bound plastic and recycled feedstock.
READ GUIDEMBRC KNOWLEDGE
Clear answers about ocean plastic, recycled materials, cleanup projects and measurable impact.
ESSENTIAL GUIDES
Understand how collected plastic becomes new materials, how cleanup support works and how brands can communicate their contribution responsibly.
MATERIALS
Understand the terminology, material routes and the difference between collected plastic, ocean-bound plastic and recycled feedstock.
READ GUIDECIRCULARITY
See how collection, sorting, processing and material development can create new applications for recovered plastic.
READ GUIDEIMPACT
Learn how product-linked and fixed-commitment models can support cleanup projects with defined mechanisms and reporting.
READ GUIDEGLOSSARY
Key terms relating to ocean plastic, recycling, circular materials, certifications and cleanup impact.
Plastic waste found in or directly removed from oceans, seas, beaches, shorelines or other marine environments. The precise origin, collection route and material quality should always be stated clearly.
OBP
Plastic waste located in areas where there is a significant risk that it may enter the ocean if it is not collected and managed properly.
Human-made waste that has entered the marine environment. It can include plastics, metal, glass, fishing gear, textiles and other persistent materials.
Plastic material processed from recovered waste and used as feedstock for new products, components or packaging applications.
PCR
Recycled plastic made from products or packaging that have already been used by consumers and collected after their intended use.
PIR
Recycled plastic made from production scrap, offcuts or other industrial waste generated before a product reaches the consumer.
PCW
Waste generated after a product has completed its intended use with a consumer or commercial end user.
A secondary raw material produced through recycling. Depending on the process, recyclate may be supplied as flakes, pellets, fibres or another usable material form.
Raw or secondary material supplied to a manufacturing or recycling process. Recycled flakes and pellets can serve as feedstock for new plastic products.
A material made from long molecular chains. Common plastic polymers include PET, PP, HDPE and LDPE, each with different properties and applications.
PET
Polyethylene terephthalate is widely used for beverage bottles, packaging and polyester fibres. It can be mechanically recycled when collected and sorted appropriately.
PP
A durable and relatively lightweight polymer used in household products, components, caps, containers and many injection-moulded applications.
HDPE
A strong polyethylene commonly used for rigid containers, household products, pipes and durable injection-moulded components.
LDPE
A flexible polyethylene commonly used for films, bags, liners and flexible packaging applications.
A process in which plastic waste is sorted, cleaned, shredded, melted and reprocessed without deliberately changing the polymer's chemical structure.
A group of processes that break polymers down into chemical building blocks, oils or other feedstocks. Environmental performance depends strongly on the technology and energy source used.
A recycling route in which recovered material is used again for the same or a closely comparable product application.
A recycling route in which recovered material is used for a different product application, often with different technical requirements.
CE
An economic model designed to reduce waste and keep products and materials in use for as long as possible through reuse, repair, refurbishment and recycling.
DfR
The practice of designing products and packaging so that their materials can be identified, separated and recycled more effectively at the end of use.
The ability to follow a material, activity or impact claim through documented stages such as collection, sorting, processing, production and reporting.
CoC
A documented system that records how material or verified attributes move between organisations and processing stages.
GRS
A voluntary third-party standard covering recycled content, chain of custody and selected social, environmental and chemical requirements.
OBP
A certification framework intended to verify defined collection zones, material flows and chain-of-custody requirements for ocean-bound plastic.
REACH
The European Union regulation governing the registration, evaluation, authorisation and restriction of chemicals.
RoHS
European rules restricting specified hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment.
LCA
A method for evaluating environmental impacts associated with the stages of a product or material life cycle, based on a defined scope and data set.
ESG
A framework used by organisations and investors to consider environmental, social and governance topics in strategy, risk management and reporting.
EPR
A policy approach that assigns producers responsibility for defined end-of-life impacts or costs associated with their products or packaging.
A transferable unit linked to a defined quantity of plastic collection or recycling activity. Quality depends on the methodology, additionality, verification and claim rules.
An organised activity that removes litter or mismanaged waste from a defined location and documents relevant information such as participants, date, region and collected quantity.
A local coordination point for collecting, sorting, storing or documenting recovered material before it moves to further processing.
Structured documentation of an activity or contribution, which may include quantities, dates, locations, project evidence, methods and approved communication claims.
Plastic particles generally smaller than five millimetres. They can be intentionally manufactured or result from the breakdown and abrasion of larger plastic products.
No matching term found.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Answers to common questions about MBRC THE OCEAN, materials, partnerships and cleanup impact.
MBRC THE OCEAN connects cleanup activities, recycled material development, products and education. The platform works with companies, retailers and communities on defined projects and communication models.
Ocean plastic has already entered a marine environment or is removed directly from it. Ocean-bound plastic is waste located in areas where there is a significant risk of entering the ocean if it is not collected and managed.
MBRC OCEANPLASTIC is MBRC's recycled material concept for suitable products and components. The exact polymer, recycled content, collection route and available certification depend on the application.
MBRC OCEANYARN is a yarn route developed from suitable recycled plastic feedstock for applications such as bracelets, lanyards, bags and textile details.
A company defines a transparent mechanism connected to products, transactions or customer actions. The contribution and the resulting cleanup support are documented and communicated using approved wording.
A company commits a fixed annual, campaign-based or minimum contribution. The scope, period, reporting and communication are agreed in advance.
The calculation depends on the agreed model. It can be based on a monetary contribution, a defined quantity, a product-linked mechanism or a location commitment. The exact logic should always be stated.
Depending on the project, reporting can include quantities, period, location, photographs, video material, certificates and approved claims.
Available certifications depend on the material route, supplier, batch and application. Relevant documentation should be checked for the specific project rather than assumed for every product.
Food-contact suitability depends on the exact material, manufacturing process, application and required regulatory testing. It must be assessed separately for each project.
Yes. MBRC can support material selection, product concepts, brand collaborations, custom developments and communication around the resulting project.
Companies can support cleanup projects, develop products with MBRC materials, create product-linked impact models, organise campaigns or explore a combination of these routes.
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