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2022.07
18
2022.07
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2022.06
Ocean Bound Plastic Certification refers to plastic waste that is not effectively managed within 30 miles (50 kilometers) of the coastline and is likely to end up in the ocean.
Ocean Bound Plastic Certification (OBP)
Ocean Bound Plastic Certification, referred to as OBP, is a certification program developed by the non-governmental organization Zero Plastic Oceans in collaboration with Control Union to protect the ocean from the continued leakage of ocean-bound plastics from land-based activities. (OBP) is also a type of plastic waste defined as "likely to flow into the ocean."
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2022.05
The ISCC system originated in Germany. The full name of ISCC is International Sustainability & Carbon Certification. It is the first standard to meet the EU Renewable Energy Directive (2009/28/ECRED). It was implemented in 2010 and has now developed into an internationally recognized certification system. All certification certificates are published on the official website www.iscc-system.org. There are currently three certification systems: ISCC EU, ISCC PLUS and CORSIA.
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2022.04
Degradable plastics, also known as environmentally degradable plastics, refer to a type of plastic that can eventually be completely degraded into carbon dioxide, methane, water and mineralized inorganic salts of the elements they contain, as well as new biomass under various conditions in nature. Limited by degradation conditions, application areas and research and development, the degradable plastics mentioned in the industry currently mainly refer to biodegradable plastics. The current mainstream degradable plastics are PBAT, PLA, etc.
15
2022.03
Carbon peak (peak carbon dioxide emissions) means that at a certain point in time, carbon dioxide emissions no longer increase and reach a peak, and then gradually decline. Carbon peak is the historical turning point when carbon dioxide emissions turn from increasing to decreasing, marking the decoupling of carbon emissions from economic development. The peak target includes the peak year and peak value. Carbon peak and carbon neutrality are collectively referred to as "dual carbon".
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2022.02
1. Post-consumer recycled materials: materials generated by households or commercial, industrial and institutional facilities as final product users that can no longer be used for their intended purpose. Includes materials recovered from the distribution chain. That is, materials that are recycled after being consumed by consumers.
2. Pre-consumer recycled materials: materials that are diverted from the waste stream during the manufacturing process. Excludes the reuse of certain materials, such as rework, regrind, or residual materials generated in processing and reused in the same processing process. That is, recycled materials that are not consumed by consumers.
3. Recycled ratio: The proportion of recycled materials by mass in a product or packaging. Only pre-consumer and post-consumer materials are considered recycled content.
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2022.01
If a company wants to apply for GRS certification, the upstream supplier of recycled raw materials should also have a GRS certification certificate. When conducting the company's GRS certification, its supplier should provide a GRS compliance certificate (scope certificate, referred to as SC) and a transaction certificate (transaction certificate, referred to as TC), and the supplier of reclaimed materials at the source of the supply chain needs to provide a Reclaimed Material Supplier Agreement and a Reclaimed Material Declaration Form, and conduct on-site verification when necessary.