SMX and Singapore's A*STAR Are Setting the Global Blueprint for Plastics Recycling (NASDAQ: SMX)
News > Business News

Audio By Carbonatix
5:45 AM on Monday, September 8
The Associated Press
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 8, 2025 / Plastics have long been cast as an environmental problem, but the conversation is shifting. And that shift couldn't be more timely, happening at a time when the world's supply chains are being defined by supply chain fragility, resource competition, and geopolitical rivalry. Yet that's only part of the story. An even sharper message is breaking through: plastics are now as much about sovereignty as they are about sustainability.
The ability to control, verify, and monetize recycled materials is becoming a question of national security and global influence. ASEAN, the European Union, and the United States all want to lead this new frontier. Singapore, with SMX's (NASDAQ: SMX ) technology as its backbone, is planting its flag first. Its intent is clear: to replace a flawed system that has failed for decades.
For years, recycling frameworks were built with good intentions but a narrow vision. They zeroed in on PET bottles and rPET packaging while overlooking industrial polymers, textiles, automotive resins, and electronics. That blind spot left most material flows outside the loop, fueling systemic failure. Recycling rates flatlined while incineration and landfills became the default.
That result was not for lack of trying. Governments set targets, brands pledged billions, NGOs lobbied for action. But the frameworks lacked one critical piece: enforceable proof, the verifiable evidence that materials are what companies and countries claim them to be. Without it, progress stalled- and that stall exposed a harder truth. Plastics are not just an ecological challenge; they are a geopolitical one. Put simply, nations that can turn waste into value will not only meet climate goals, they will also gain leverage in trade, industrial competitiveness, and supply chain resilience.
Turning Material Into Data
SMX delivers that missing piece by turning materials into data to create true material efficiency. Unlike stickers or labels that can be removed or forged, SMX embeds its proof directly into the material itself. Its patented molecular markers are embedded into plastics, metals, textiles, and natural rubber, giving every item a scannable, tamper-resistant identity tied to a verified digital passport. That immutable identity then follows goods from origin through use, recycling, and chemical transformation, proving recycled content, authenticity, and chain of custody in real time.
The result is enforceable compliance, anti-counterfeiting, and true material efficiency that converts sustainability from promise to measurable value. And SMX delivers something more: the Plastic Cycle Token, or PCT, built to take this system into global markets. The PCT is a digital asset framework that monetizes verified recycled content, creating a marketplace for recycled inputs similar to how carbon credits created a financial market for emissions. Together, the technology and the token form a closed loop of physical-to-digital verification and tradeable value.
This is the foundation on which Singapore is building the world's first national plastic passport program. Working through A*STAR, its premier research agency, the country is embedding SMX's technology into public infrastructure. The effort goes beyond a domestic initiative. It is a strategic move to position Singapore as a global leader in plastics circularity, creating a blueprint that other ASEAN nations can follow. With ASEAN's plastic economy projected at S$4.2 billion annually, Singapore's early adoption sends a clear signal to the region and the world: leadership in sustainability can be converted into geopolitical advantage.
Checking All The Right Boxes
Europe, with its Green Deal and plastics mandates, has tried to set the regulatory tone, but enforcement gaps and fragmented reporting systems have hindered progress. The United States, despite its industrial scale, has lagged in developing cohesive national frameworks for recycling and continues to rely on outdated tax and quota systems. By contrast, Singapore's model shows a new path; one where proof is digitized, compliance is auditable, and recycled materials can be traded as verifiable assets across borders.
This approach goes beyond meeting environmental obligations. It establishes a new layer of economic sovereignty. It also turns proof into a new form of currency. That currency matters because the geopolitics of plastic is not only about who can recycle more efficiently, but it is also about who controls the data, the tokens, and ultimately the markets that define value. Just as OPEC shaped decades of global power through oil, and just as China consolidated influence over rare earth elements, the countries that can prove and monetize recycled content will control the new resource that underpins 21st-century manufacturing. Singapore has chosen to move first, leveraging SMX's system as its competitive edge.
For stakeholders, policymakers, and multinationals, the implications are profound: plastics don't need to be seen as a liability but instead as an emerging asset class. SMX is enabling what regulators and markets have been demanding: transparency, accountability, and measurable impact. Singapore's adoption proves that this model is not theoretical; it is live infrastructure. The race now is who follows and who falls behind. In that race, SMX is more than a technology provider. It is both an enabler and an architect. In other words, the perfect partner.
References
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/26/china-rare-earths-baotou-life-metallic-elements
https://commission.europa.eu/strategy-and-policy/priorities-2019-2024/european-green-deal_en
Los Angeles Tribune. "Carbon Credits Had Their Day… Now the SMX Plastic Cycle Token…" Feature article; 2025.
National Environment Agency (NEA). Waste & Recycling Statistics 2014 - 2023. Singapore: NEA; 2024.
Shunpoly.com. "How Much Plastic Is Wasted Each Year in Singapore?" Accessed 5 August 2025.
Singapore Statutes Online. Environmental Public Health (Public Cleansing) Regulations - Incineration gate-fee schedule; revised 2024.
National Environment Agency (NEA). "New Licensing Regime for General Waste Disposal Facilities." Technical brief & dialogue-session slides; 2024.
Nasdaq.com. "SMX Announces Planned Launch of World's First Plastic Cycle Token." Press release; 2024.
Yahoo! Finance. "SMX Plastic Cycle Token Is a Functional Market-Driven Solution…" News article; 2024.
National Environment Agency (NEA). Waste-Statistics & Overall Recycling (interactive dashboard). Updated 2024; accessed 5 August 2025.
National Environment Agency (NEA). Mandatory Packaging Reporting portal. Accessed 5 August 2025.
National Environment Agency (NEA). Refuse Collection Fees for Households. Revised 2024; accessed 5 August 2025.
About SMX
As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.
Forward-Looking Statements
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EMAIL: [email protected]
SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited
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