Community Point

Reasoning and my thoughts

I've tried to figure out how to start and from what I could tell, locally this project is dead. Because of that, starting a workshop even a small one, would be cost intensive and with a low chance of becoming sustainable. According to the PP academy, the most successful workshops focus on one part of the supply chain and optimize that. That seems very reasonable and corresponds with my experience in problem solving. It also means that without a certain size of active community, the chance of success is close to zero.

Because of that and considering that for the moment this will be a spare time project for me. I think that my primary focus should be in community building. The first step is laying out who else is close by and has interest or are currently active in recycling or cleaning plastic or other sustainability projects.

Community Building Checklist

Plan of action

Precious Plastic is a chain of supply.

Collection → Sorting → Washing → Shredding → Raw Product → Product.

The whole thing starts with discarded plastic. The supply is very high but the quality is low.

On the other hand, there is virtually zero demand to recycled plastic products. People are more concerned with price and quality of the product than what and how it was produced.

The supply chain could be broken to small individual pieces but that would mean that there need to exist multiple workshops and in Israel there is only one educational workshop.

If we could gather around 20 to 30 people in the community we could maybe break down the supply chain to small manageable tasks that people can do as part time until the chain becomes viable.

Another key point is creating demand on the product side. I feel like creating raw products (sheets, bricks, rods, beams) and stocking up on those would be beneficial to introducing the material to regular businesses.