Today, Kia Corporation joins the growing wave of companies forming strategic
partnerships to secure a reliable supply chain for ocean plastic.
Kia has launched a seven-year partnership with Dutch non-profit organization
The Ocean Cleanup (TOC) to explore ways to
co-create win-win solutions to the global plastic pollution crisis.
TOC is developing and scaling
technologies
to rid the world's oceans of plastic by stemming the inflow via rivers, as well
as by cleaning up what has already
accumulated
in the ocean. For the latter, The Ocean Cleanup is developing large-scale
systems to efficiently concentrate the plastic for periodic removal. To curb the
tide via rivers, it has developed Interceptor™ Solutions to halt and extract
riverine plastic before it reaches the ocean.
Through the partnership, Kia will support TOC as an official “Global Partner”
via financial contributions and in-kind supplies to initiate ocean and river
cleanup projects; support construction of TOC’s various river-cleaning devices;
and create a resource-circulation system that will integrate harvested plastics
into Kia's production and value chain process.
Kia will also supply four electric vehicles, including one EV6 and three Niro
EVs, to the organization’s headquarters in the Netherlands. In return, The Ocean
Cleanup will supply usable portions of the collected plastic and share its
research results and relevant data on reducing plastic pollution with Kia.
"The key to Kia's
vision
for a sustainable future is not just to change the product and service areas,
but to make positive changes for the planet,” said Kia president and CEO Ho
Sung Song. "Kia will continue to make inspirational movements through open
partnerships with organizations like The Ocean Cleanup that have innovative
technologies and ideas."
This partnership is one of the key strategies in Kia’s corporate vision to build
a sustainable future for mobility. Kia plans to increase its percentage of
plastic re-use to 20 percent by 2030 and expects to further contribute to
environmental protection by establishing and activating a “virtuous recycling
loop” to minimize climate impact when disposing of vehicles.
“Plastic is not inherently a bad material, but we must use it responsibly. We
demonstrate how we can turn pollution into a solution by launching applications
that help clean the oceans and simultaneously – together with our partner Kia –
provide proof that recycled plastic can be used sustainably. I hope that we can
inspire others to do the same,” said Boyan Slat, founder and CEO of The
Ocean Cleanup. “This cooperation is the next step in our efforts to [prevent
our catch from ending up] back in the environment while using its value to
support our cleanup efforts further.”
Kia joins companies including The Body
Shop,
Kevin
Murphy,
PUMA and SC
Johnson
that have formed strategic partnerships to ensure a steady supply of ocean
plastic feedstock for recycling into their products and packaging. Combined with
the UN’s recent global plastics
treaty
and the work of collaboratives such as NextWave
Plastics;
marketplaces such as
Oceanworks; and organizations
such as the Ocean Plastic Leadership
Network,
we hope to soon see signs of the tide turning on global plastic pollution.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Apr 28, 2022 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST