Mitsubishi Chemical Advanced Materials Aims for Climate Neutrality by 2023 and Climate Positivity by 2030
Two recent MCAM acquisitions further support the company’s circular economy actions.
Global manufacturer of high-performance engineering thermoplastics (MCAM; U.S. office in Mesa, Ariz.) has announced its goal to achieve climate positivity in its own operations by 2030. As such, it has set ambitious targets and actions to reduce its emissions and environmental impact, compensate for unavoidable emissions with high-quality carbon credits, and invest in carbon removal projects.
MCAM’s goals build on an in-depth gap analysis of its progress across all existing climate action carried out in 2020, which enabled the company to set the first essential milestone of becoming climate neutral by 2023. Half of MCAM’s 32 manufacturing and fabrication sites around the world already use 100% electricity based on renewable sources; 5 of these locations additionally compensate for their remaining emissions.

Moreover, the company has accelerated its organic effort to implement its circular economy strategy by proceeding with several acquisitions, including:
â–ª The recycling activities of ‘Minger Kunststofftechnik AG’ (now MCAM Symalit AG, Appenzell Branch, Recycling Solutions). Minger Kunststofftechnik AG has been a market leader in recycling of engineering plastics and especially advanced materials.
â–ª CFK Valley Stade Recycling GmbH and CO KG and carboNXT GmbH. CFK is a leading solutions provider for customers in mobility-related industries and offers advanced proprietary technology that breaks down carbon fiber waste and converts this material into various usable forms of carbon fiber. carboNXT closes the loop by offering these products back to the market.
Related Content
-
Plastics Processing Activity Drops in November
The drop in plastics activity appears to be driven by a return to accelerated contraction for three closely connected components — new orders, production and backlog.
-
Plastics Processing Activity Contraction Continues in August
Four months of consecutive contraction overall.
-
Processing Takes a Dip in June
Plastics activity took a relatively big downturn in June, ending at a low for the year and lower than the same month a year ago.