In implementing the project, however, the company also had to learn how many regulations lie behind the recycling process. Of course, this can also be a deterrent. Do the quality and hygiene requirements and the associated regulations prevent a successful recycling economy, we asked Marc Luginsland. "Exactly," he asnwered and continued: "These regulations in medical technology and in the approval processes lead to this. You have to provide evidence there: Where do the materials come from? Which materials are approved? Do they not only fulfill the material properties, but also other chemical and biological properties, such as compatibility and biocompatibility? You can't be sure of that with recyclates that come from hospitals. There are fluctuations in the batches. Those are issues that are just very big problems there to reuse the plastics directly for medical devices."
If current materials in medicine are difficult to recycle, might new materials be needed? "That's a variant, of course. To say I produce plastics based on renewable raw materials – so-called bioplastics – which I then recycle for energy, thus generating a balanced CO2 calculation. But the problem is that these biodegradable materials sometimes do not yet meet the requirements of a medical product in terms of purity and the required properties," says Dr. Martin Kausch, answering this question.
Julian Lotz has already developed a solution here. With his company BIOVOX GmbH, he has proven that it is possible to meet the high requirements for medical materials with bioplastics. Where the motivation came from and what makes the compounds sustainable and thus also unique, he revealed in an interview with K-Mag.