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Mexico Ginger Market Overview, 2030

Published Oct 06, 2025
Length 77 Pages
SKU # BORM20449629

Description

The plastic recycling market in South Africa has developed steadily over the past three decades, driven by increasing urbanization, rising plastic consumption, and government-led sustainability initiatives. In the 1990s and early 2000s, recycling was largely informal, dominated by waste pickers (“reclaimers”) collecting PET bottles, HDPE containers, and other high-value plastics to sell to small-scale recyclers. The introduction of the National Environmental Management: Waste Act (2008) and subsequent regulations formalized recycling frameworks, mandated separation at source, and supported public-private partnerships. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes, led by organizations such as PETCO (Polyethylene Terephthalate Recycling Company) and Polyco (Polyolefin Recycling Company), incentivized the collection of post-consumer plastics, ensuring steady feedstock supply. Over time, investments in mechanical recycling infrastructure, sorting centers, and pilot chemical recycling facilities have expanded processing capacity for PET, HDPE, LDPE, and multilayer packaging. Municipal programs, particularly in major cities like Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban, have improved collection efficiency, while cooperatives and formalized waste pickers contribute significantly to the supply chain. Brand initiatives by companies such as Coca-Cola, Nestlé, Unilever, and SABMiller have strengthened post-consumer collection and promoted the use of recycled content. Despite progress, challenges remain, including contamination in post-consumer streams, limited chemical recycling adoption, and reliance on imported scrap for certain polymer types. The market has transitioned from fragmented, informal operations to a structured system integrating mechanical and emerging chemical recycling processes. Today, South Africa’s recycling ecosystem is aligned with circular economy principles, combining regulatory support, corporate initiatives, and technological advancements to enhance material recovery, environmental sustainability, and social inclusion within the plastic recycling sector.

According to the research report "" South Africa Plastic Recycling Market Overview, 2030,"" published by Bonafide Research, the South Africa Plastic Recycling market is anticipated to grow at more than 7.83% CAGR from 2025 to 2030. South Africa’s plastic recycling industry is characterized by a combination of multinational corporations, regional companies, and cooperatives, reflecting a formalizing and evolving market. International players such as Veolia, Indorama Ventures, LyondellBasell, BASF, Covestro, and ExxonMobil are active in high-value recycling streams, offering processing technologies, consulting, and recycled feedstock for industrial and consumer applications. Local companies and organizations, including PETCO, Polyco, Mpact, EnviroServ, and Interwaste, dominate collection, sorting, and mechanical recycling, often collaborating with municipalities, cooperatives, and private brands. Waste picker cooperatives play a significant role in post-consumer feedstock collection, integrating informal sectors into formal systems and ensuring social inclusion. Partnerships between recyclers and FMCG brands such as Coca-Cola South Africa, Nestlé, Unilever, and SABMiller focus on securing recycled content, improving supply chain traceability, and meeting corporate sustainability goals. M&A activity and market consolidation trends are emerging, as larger operators acquire smaller recyclers to expand feedstock access, geographic reach, and technological capabilities. Emerging startups are piloting chemical recycling and advanced sorting solutions to handle LDPE films, multilayer packaging, and polystyrene, complementing existing mechanical recycling streams. Investment trends indicate a focus on plant modernization, automation, digital monitoring, and quality assurance. Overall, South Africa’s competitive landscape blends multinational expertise, cooperative networks, and innovative startups, emphasizing collaboration, technological adoption, and strategic brand partnerships. This dynamic ecosystem strengthens recycling rates, enhances material quality, and aligns the industry with national circular economy and sustainability objectives, positioning South Africa as a key plastic recycling hub in Africa.

The South African plastic recycling market is segmented by polymer types, with Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) and High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE) dominating due to high collection efficiency and demand in beverage, food, and packaging sectors. PET bottles are widely collected through municipal programs, cooperative networks, and corporate take-back initiatives and are recycled into bottles, polyester fibers, and industrial products. HDPE containers, such as milk jugs, detergent bottles, and rigid packaging, are recycled into pipes, crates, and non-food containers, although contamination can limit food-grade applications. Polypropylene (PP), used in packaging, automotive components, and household products, is increasingly recovered mechanically, although post-consumer collection faces challenges due to sorting difficulties. Low-Density Polyethylene (LDPE), including films, bags, and agricultural sheets, is mechanically recycled at limited scale, with chemical recycling initiatives emerging to process flexible or multilayer materials. Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) recycling is limited due to hazardous additives, with recovered material used in construction, piping, and flooring applications. Polystyrene (PS) is primarily recovered from industrial and packaging streams, with chemical recycling explored for foam and multilayer products. The others category, including ABS, polycarbonate, and nylon, is sourced mainly from industrial scrap and e-waste, repurposed in electronics, automotive, and specialty sectors. While PET and HDPE dominate volume, PP, LDPE, PS, and specialty polymers offer significant growth opportunities, driven by technological advancements in sorting, chemical recycling, and corporate recycled content initiatives. South Africa’s polymer-specific recycling ecosystem is increasingly capable of handling diverse plastics, supporting circular economy objectives and meeting demand from multiple industrial applications.

The South African plastic recycling market relies on post-consumer plastic waste (PCPW) and post-industrial plastic waste (PIPW) as key feedstocks. Post-consumer waste constitutes the majority of collected material, sourced from households, commercial establishments, municipalities, and informal sectors. PET bottles, HDPE containers, and LDPE films dominate post-consumer streams, supported by municipal collection programs, cooperatives, and corporate take-back initiatives led by Coca-Cola, Nestlé, Unilever, and SABMiller. Deposit-return schemes, voluntary corporate initiatives, and awareness campaigns have enhanced recovery rates for high-value plastics. Challenges include contamination, mixed materials, and limited collection coverage in rural or informal settlements. Post-industrial waste, derived from manufacturing scrap, industrial trimmings, and e-waste, provides cleaner, homogeneous feedstock including PP, ABS, polycarbonate, and engineering plastics, which are easier to process mechanically or chemically and re-enter industrial supply chains for automotive, electronics, and construction sectors. Together, these feedstocks create a balanced material base for recycling, optimizing quality, volume, and process feasibility. Regulatory frameworks such as the National Environmental Management: Waste Act (2008), coupled with corporate EPR initiatives, support systematic collection, sorting, and processing of both streams. Digital traceability, automated sorting, and quality monitoring are increasingly implemented to maximize efficiency and material quality. Integration of post-consumer and post-industrial streams underpins South Africa’s circular economy strategy, strengthens supply chains, and supports environmental sustainability while providing a reliable source of feedstock for downstream recycling processes.

Mechanical recycling is the predominant method in South Africa, particularly for PET, HDPE, and PP streams, where plastics are collected, washed, shredded, and pelletized for use in bottles, packaging, fibers, and industrial applications. Mechanical recycling benefits from organized municipal collection programs, cooperative networks, and post-industrial feedstock, which provides relatively clean and consistent material. Contamination, flexible films, and multilayer packaging limit output quality and food-grade applications. To address these limitations, chemical recycling is emerging as a complementary process, including pyrolysis, depolymerization, and solvent-based methods to convert mixed or hard-to-recycle plastics into monomers, fuels, or virgin-quality feedstock. Pilot projects focus on multilayer packaging, LDPE films, and polystyrene foam. Public-private partnerships, government incentives, and corporate investment support chemical recycling infrastructure development. Automation, AI-enabled sorting, and digital monitoring are increasingly used to improve efficiency, traceability, and material quality. While mechanical recycling currently dominates volume, chemical recycling is projected to expand significantly, complementing existing processes and enhancing recovery of complex plastics. Together, these processes create a hybrid recycling system that maximizes material recovery, ensures high-quality output, reduces landfill dependency, and aligns with South Africa’s circular economy and sustainability goals. These processes form a hybrid recycling system that maximizes material recovery, produces high-quality recyclates, reduces landfill dependency, and supports circular economy objectives, environmental sustainability, and industrial scalability across multiple regions.

In South Africa, packaging represents the largest end-user sector for recycled plastics, driven by beverage, food, and FMCG industries, which generate substantial post-consumer waste. Recycled PET and HDPE are utilized in bottles, containers, and packaging films, while LDPE is repurposed into secondary packaging despite contamination and multilayer challenges. The electronics and electrical sector consumes ABS, polycarbonate, and engineering plastics recovered from industrial scrap and e-waste for housings, casings, connectors, and components for industrial and consumer electronics. In the automotive industry, recycled PP, ABS, and PET fibers are used in bumpers, dashboards, insulation, underbody panels, and other components, aligning with OEM sustainability and circular economy targets. Building and construction applications include recycled PVC, HDPE, and PP for pipes, flooring, insulation, and composite panels, supported by infrastructure development and sustainable construction initiatives. The others category encompasses textiles, agricultural films, consumer goods, and industrial applications, with recycled PET converted into polyester fibers for clothing, furnishings, and industrial fabrics, and LDPE films reused for mulch, sheeting, and irrigation systems. Regulatory mandates, corporate EPR initiatives, and brand sustainability commitments drive the adoption of recycled plastics across sectors. South Africa’s end-user landscape balances high-volume traditional applications with emerging high-value uses, supporting demand for both mechanical and chemically recycled materials, industrial scalability, environmental sustainability, and a structured, technologically advanced recycling ecosystem.


Considered in this report
• Historic Year: 2019
• Base year: 2024
• Estimated year: 2025
• Forecast year: 2030

Aspects covered in this report
• Plastic Recycling Market with its value and forecast along with its segments
• Various drivers and challenges
• On-going trends and developments
• Top profiled companies
• Strategic recommendation

By Product Types
• Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET)
• High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE)
• Polypropylene (PP)
• Low-Density Polyethylene (LDPE)
• Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC)
• Polystyrene (PS)
• Others (ABS, Polycarbonate, Nylon, ETC.)

By Source
• Post-Consumer Plastic Waste
• Post-Industrial Plastic Waste

By Recycling Process
• Mechanical Recycling market
• Chemical recycling
• By End User Industries
• Packaging
• Electronics & Electrical
• Automotive
• Building & Construction
• Others 

Considered in this report
• Historic Year: 2019
• Base year: 2024
• Estimated year: 2025
• Forecast year: 2030

Aspects covered in this report
• Ginger Market with its value and forecast along with its segments
• Various drivers and challenges
• On-going trends and developments
• Top profiled companies
• Strategic recommendation

By Product Type
• Fresh Ginger
• Dried Ginger
• Preserved Ginger
• Ginger Oil
• others

By Application
• Food Industry
• Pharmaceuticals Industry
• Cosmetics Industry
• Others

By Distribution Channel
• Business-to-Consumer
• Business-to-Business

Table of Contents

77 Pages
1. Executive Summary
2. Market Structure
2.1. Market Considerate
2.2. Assumptions
2.3. Limitations
2.4. Abbreviations
2.5. Sources
2.6. Definitions
3. Research Methodology
3.1. Secondary Research
3.2. Primary Data Collection
3.3. Market Formation & Validation
3.4. Report Writing, Quality Check & Delivery
4. Mexico Geography
4.1. Population Distribution Table
4.2. Mexico Macro Economic Indicators
5. Market Dynamics
5.1. Key Insights
5.2. Recent Developments
5.3. Market Drivers & Opportunities
5.4. Market Restraints & Challenges
5.5. Market Trends
5.6. Supply chain Analysis
5.7. Policy & Regulatory Framework
5.8. Industry Experts Views
6. Mexico Ginger Market Overview
6.1. Market Size By Value
6.2. Market Size and Forecast, By Product Type
6.3. Market Size and Forecast, By Application
6.4. Market Size and Forecast, By Distribution Channel
6.5. Market Size and Forecast, By Region
7. Mexico Ginger Market Segmentations
7.1. Mexico Ginger Market, By Product Type
7.1.1. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Fresh Ginger, 2019-2030
7.1.2. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Dried Ginger, 2019-2030
7.1.3. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Preserved Ginger, 2019-2030
7.1.4. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Ginger Oil, 2019-2030
7.1.5. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Others, 2019-2030
7.2. Mexico Ginger Market, By Application
7.2.1. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Food Industry, 2019-2030
7.2.2. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Pharmaceuticals Industry, 2019-2030
7.2.3. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Cosmetics Industry, 2019-2030
7.2.4. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Others, 2019-2030
7.3. Mexico Ginger Market, By Distribution Channel
7.3.1. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Business-to-Consumer, 2019-2030
7.3.2. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By Business-to-Business, 2019-2030
7.4. Mexico Ginger Market, By Region
7.4.1. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By North, 2019-2030
7.4.2. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By East, 2019-2030
7.4.3. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By West, 2019-2030
7.4.4. Mexico Ginger Market Size, By South, 2019-2030
8. Mexico Ginger Market Opportunity Assessment
8.1. By Product Type, 2025 to 2030
8.2. By Application, 2025 to 2030
8.3. By Distribution Channel, 2025 to 2030
8.4. By Region, 2025 to 2030
9. Competitive Landscape
9.1. Porter's Five Forces
9.2. Company Profile
9.2.1. Company 1
9.2.1.1. Company Snapshot
9.2.1.2. Company Overview
9.2.1.3. Financial Highlights
9.2.1.4. Geographic Insights
9.2.1.5. Business Segment & Performance
9.2.1.6. Product Portfolio
9.2.1.7. Key Executives
9.2.1.8. Strategic Moves & Developments
9.2.2. Company 2
9.2.3. Company 3
9.2.4. Company 4
9.2.5. Company 5
9.2.6. Company 6
9.2.7. Company 7
9.2.8. Company 8
10. Strategic Recommendations
11. Disclaimer
List of Tables
Figure 1: Mexico Ginger Market Size By Value (2019, 2024 & 2030F) (in USD Million)
Figure 2: Market Attractiveness Index, By Product Type
Figure 3: Market Attractiveness Index, By Application
Figure 4: Market Attractiveness Index, By Distribution Channel
Figure 5: Market Attractiveness Index, By Region
Figure 6: Porter's Five Forces of Mexico Ginger Market
List of Figures
Table 1: Influencing Factors for Ginger Market, 2024
Table 2: Mexico Ginger Market Size and Forecast, By Product Type (2019 to 2030F) (In USD Million)
Table 3: Mexico Ginger Market Size and Forecast, By Application (2019 to 2030F) (In USD Million)
Table 4: Mexico Ginger Market Size and Forecast, By Distribution Channel (2019 to 2030F) (In USD Million)
Table 5: Mexico Ginger Market Size and Forecast, By Region (2019 to 2030F) (In USD Million)
Table 6: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Fresh Ginger (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 7: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Dried Ginger (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 8: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Preserved Ginger (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 9: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Ginger Oil (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 10: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Others (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 11: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Food Industry (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 12: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Pharmaceuticals Industry (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 13: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Cosmetics Industry (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 14: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Others (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 15: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Business-to-Consumer (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 16: Mexico Ginger Market Size of Business-to-Business (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 17: Mexico Ginger Market Size of North (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 18: Mexico Ginger Market Size of East (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 19: Mexico Ginger Market Size of West (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
Table 20: Mexico Ginger Market Size of South (2019 to 2030) in USD Million
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