Trading company Vitol has acquired an additional 15.3pc stake in Danish pyrolysis chemical recycling firm Waste Plastic Upcycling (WPU). It comes as WPU announced successful completion of tests on the second and third reactor lines at its first commercial scale unit in Faarevejle, Denmark.
Vitol paid 250mn Danish krone ($37mn) for the additional stake, which takes its total holding in WPU to 24.7pc. Vitol has also bolstered its offtake agreement for products from WPU's site and future sites, setting a price for wax feedstock produced from the pyrolysis process and extending the delivery contract agreement to 10 years from the commencement of each WPU facility, up from three years, with two further single year options.
WPU will reinvest 20pc of the proceeds from the sale as an ordinary shareholder loan, part of which will go towards funding the construction a new production facility in Nakskov, Denmark. It expects to begin construction at Nakskov in the fourth quarter of this year.
WPU also announced today that it has finalised cold and hot tests and initial upcycling test cycles on the second and third reactors at its 42,000 t/yr Faarevejle facility. The firm will now test the first, second and third lines — which make up "Train 1" — together. It expects to finalise these tests "by the end of the summer holiday". WPU expects the Faarevejle plant to be cash positive from the third quarter and fully operational by the fourth quarter.
The firm said it made its first delivery of "plastic-to-liquid (PtL)" pyrolysis oil to Vitol on 23 June. Vitol said it will deliver the pyrolysis oil to "one of our long-term global customers in the chemical industry".
"Vitol are pleased to continue our partnership with WPU in the next phase of their growth," Vitol's head of naphtha Tom Baker said. "We have been impressed with what the WPU team have achieved to date and our involvement will continue to add value in developing the business."
WPU has plans for three facilities with a total plastic waste processing capacity of 160,000 t/yr. It estimates that construction on the third facility — in Esbjerg, Denmark — will begin in the fourth quarter of next year.