Leading real estate developer in Southeast Asia, SM Prime Holdings, Inc. (SM Prime) recently signed a memorandum of understanding with Japan’s GUUN Co. Ltd. to explore a potential partnership to implement waste management solutions by recycling waste paper and plastics as an alternative source of energy called ‘fluff fuel’.
Fluff Fuels are one type of RDF (Refuse Derived Fuel) which are produced from shredded and compressed plastics, papers, and fibers. These are used as fuels in cement manufacturing, paper mill companies, or power companies in Japan.
SM Prime
Chairman of the Executive Committee Hans T. Sy is positive that a partnership with
GUUN will contribute to the waste reduction goals of the country. “Today,
Japan’s waste management and recycling technology is among the most advanced in
the world,” he said. “There is no better partner for SM because we do not just talk about being big,
we make sure we do it; we do not talk about being environment friendly but we
do take bold steps to save the environment. I am
looking forward to growing with GUUN as among leaders in solving environmental
issues in the Philippines.”
GUUN Co., Ltd., founded in March 2001
and headquartered in Yokohama City, Japan, piloted the production of fluff fuel
from plastic waste in Inayawan, Cebu in 2014 and recently inaugurated its
P200-million, 2,400-square meter waste recycling plant in Tayud, Consolacion, Cebu.
Since then, Japan’s Ministry of the Environment
has adopted GUUN’s waste-to-fuel technology as a model for advanced low-carbon
technology innovation for further deployment in developing countries.
“This will be a milestone partnership
for us,” GUNN Chief Executive Officer Shinji Fujieda said after the signing
ceremony. "I understand very much how important waste management is for SM
and for the Philippines and we look forward to more projects we can do with the
properties of SM Prime.”
SM Prime’s
initiatives for waste management include waste reduction and effective waste
collection and segregation. Over the years, it has implemented programs such as
Trash to Cash, Plastic Waste Collection, and E-Waste Collection that have
contributed to reducing the total solid waste generation across its real estate
portfolio.
Through
its pioneering Trash to Cash recycling market, SM Prime has collected and
recycled 1.4M kg of plastics, paper, metals, and others in 2022. “We have saved
16,766 trees from the 986,222 kg of paper recycled,” SM Prime disclosed in its
2022 Integrated Report to shareholders.
Meanwhile,
SM’s Plastic Waste Collection program, a partnership with the Plastic Credit
Exchange that was launched in February 2021, has accumulated 42,541kg of plastic
waste from 14 mall sites. Also present in all its 83 SM Supermalls is the
E-Waste Collection program for the responsible disposal of WEEE (Waste from
Electrical and Electronic Equipment). This drive has helped process close to
7,000 kilograms of e-waste. (ENDS)
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