After buying out bondholders in February, plastic recycler resells the paper
BY SourceMedia | MUNICIPAL | 11/13/24 12:16 PM ESTThe owner of a municipal-bond-financed plastic recycling plant in Ohio says the project's bumpy ride is smoothing out.
PureCycle Technologies
The firm's struggles to construct its plastics recycling operation in Ironton, Ohio, amid delays and disputes with contractors led to a default designation, and in February it agreed to buy back the $249 million of Southern Ohio Port Authority bonds issued in 2020 to fund construction of the facility.
Chief Executive Officer Dustin Olson in March said more than 99% of holders accepted the offer.
The company has since, after removing most of the bond covenants, sold many of those bonds onward.
Chief Financial Officer Jaime Vasquez said in the earnings call that on top of the $18 million in proceeds from revenue bond sales earlier in the third quarter, gained from selling $22.5 million par value of the 2020 revenue bonds, PureCycle
In May, according to its second-quarter 10Q filing, PureCycle
Vasquez said on the third-quarter earnings call that the company plans to sell $118 million more of those revenue bonds over the next several months "that should further support our liquidity needs in 2025."
Olson in the earnings call said the company has been successful in early customer trials and qualifications of its products from Ironton, but isn't providing incremental revenue projections for 2025.
Olson said the proceeds from the Ironton revenue bonds and the September capital raise generated over $105 million in net proceeds.
PureCycle
The Southern Ohio Port Authority issued three series of tax-exempt facility revenue bonds for PureCycle's
The bonds were originally issued to finance the factory, which recycles used plastics to create what PureCycle
Construction of the factory was completed in April 2023. This April, operations at the facility were put on pause to make improvements geared toward more reliable and consistent product quality.
"Will PureCycle
"We had a lot of constraints ramping up this facility over the last six to nine months," Olson said of Ironton.
"But the solution that we put in place there has really unbridled the capacity at Ironton, and we feel really good about that," he said.
Olson added, "We have an asset at Ironton that we can control that will do what we ask it to do? In order to get to breakeven at the Ironton facility, we need between 40% and 50% utilization at the facility. And in order to get to breakeven for the company, not including capex spend, it takes 80% to 90% rate at Ironton. And we still hold to that. We've been doing a lot of modeling."
PureCycle