Table of Contents Pyrolysis Market In Thailand Based on a
Is Plastic Granulation Better Than Pyrolysis Into Oil
When people ask this question, they usually mean one thing: which route makes more money with less risk. My read of the current evidence is simple: for clean, sorted plastic, recycling and granulation are usually the better business. For mixed, dirty, or hard-to-recycle plastic, pyrolysis can create value, but it has higher risk, higher complexity, and a harder time proving stable profit. That is also close to how major technical and policy sources frame the two routes today.
Mechanical recycling is commonly seen as the lower-impact first choice, while chemical recycling such as pyrolysis is often treated as a secondary option when mechanical recycling is not suitable.
What readers are actually searching for
I reviewed current search results and technical sources around this topic. The recurring ideas are not just “plastic recycling” and “pyrolysis oil.” They keep circling the same business questions: profitability, feedstock quality, contamination, sorting cost, energy use, emissions, scale, conversion efficiency, market demand, and regulation. Those themes show up across recent reviews, a NIST report, a JRC economic assessment, and current news coverage of the pyrolysis market.

Semantic keyword map from current search results
Core semantic node | What it means in plain English | Useful keywords to cover |
Mechanical recycling | Sorting, washing, shredding, remelting, pelletizing | granulation, pellets, recyclate, PET, HDPE, clean feedstock |
Pyrolysis | Heating plastic without oxygen to make oil, gas, and char | pyrolysis oil, chemical recycling, advanced recycling, feedstock |
Profitability | Whether the project makes money after all costs | ROI, IRR, margin, payback, opex, capex |
Feedstock quality | How clean and consistent the input is | contaminated plastic, mixed plastic, sorted waste, homogeneous input |
Conversion efficiency | How much output you get from input | yield, recovery rate, mass retention, product yield |
Energy and emissions | Operating cost and climate impact | energy use, greenhouse gas, CO2, pollution |
Scale and operations | Whether the plant can run steadily | throughput, capacity, uptime, preprocessing, sorting line |
Market risk | Whether the output can be sold at a stable price | pellet price, oil price, offtake, demand, volatility |
Regulation | Permits and policy can make or break the business | compliance, permits, uncertainty, standards |
End use | What the output becomes | new plastic, fuel, feedstock, virgin replacement |
These nodes are the heart of the topic because the current sources keep returning to them. Mechanical recycling is described as the lower-impact route and, in many cases, the first option. Pyrolysis is described as promising, but only under the right feedstock and market conditions.
The short business answer
If your goal is selling a recycled plastic product, recycling and granulation usually win when you can secure clean, sorted input such as PET or HDPE. The reason is that the process is simpler, easier to explain to buyers, and closer to a true circular material loop. The same NIST report says mechanical recycling is generally seen as the most beneficial means for plastic recycling because of its lower environmental impact, while chemical recycling is typically treated as a secondary option and more capital-intensive.
If your goal is turning low-value mixed plastic into an oil product, pyrolysis can be attractive, but it is not automatically better. Yale’s review notes that profitability depends on plastic type and oil price, and that pyrolysis is not the same thing as recycling in the strict material-loop sense. Current industry reporting also shows major players backing away from some ambitious pyrolysis targets because of feedstock shortages, slow technology progress, and regulatory uncertainty.

Granulation vs. pyrolysis: practical comparison
Item | Recycling and granulation | Pyrolysis into oil |
Main product | Plastic pellets / granules | Pyrolysis oil, gas, and some solid residue |
Best feedstock | Clean, sorted, mostly single-polymer waste | Mixed or hard-to-recycle plastics, but usually still needs prep |
Profit driver | Stable pellet sales and lower process complexity | Oil price, by-product value, and strong offtake |
Cost profile | Usually simpler plant layout and lower complexity | Higher capex, higher energy use, more process control |
Market risk | Depends on pellet quality and contamination control | Depends on oil quality, refinery acceptance, and policy risk |
Environmental story | Usually better for material circularity | Can help divert waste, but emissions and energy use are a concern |
Main weakness | Fails on dirty, mixed, or badly sorted waste | Feedstock quality, scaling, permits, and market uncertainty |
This table matches what the current literature says. Mechanical recycling is often the preferred option when the material is suitable, while pyrolysis can convert plastic into fuel-range products but is more sensitive to feedstock, scale, and operating conditions. Recent reviews also report that pyrolysis can reach high conversion rates in some cases, but that does not erase the economic and operational limits around collection, sorting, and clean input supply.
Why granulation often makes more business sense
For many buyers, granulation is easier to sell because the value proposition is simple: you buy waste, you process it, and you sell pellets. That business model usually works best when you have stable input, decent sorting, and a local market that can absorb the pellets. A 2024 paper on mechanical recycling points out that cost calculation exposes big pitfalls such as scale, input capacity, mass retention, and waste composition. In other words, the plant can look good on paper and still struggle if the feedstock is wrong or the line is too small.
This is why clean feedstock matters so much. NIST notes that mechanical recycling is typically the most beneficial option, but it also highlights how hard it is to keep contamination out of the system. When input is too dirty or mixed, the process loses value fast. That is exactly where many operators start looking at pyrolysis instead.

Why pyrolysis still attracts buyers
Pyrolysis has one clear advantage: it can turn plastic waste into a liquid fuel-like product, and some reviews report liquid fuel yields around 60% to 80%, with higher numbers in favorable process windows. Another recent study reported maximum conversion efficiency of 88% in its model comparison. That is why many investors still see pyrolysis as a way to monetize plastics that cannot easily go through mechanical recycling.
But here is the catch: high conversion does not automatically mean high profit. The same body of current reporting keeps pointing to the same weak spots: the process is energy-intensive, the input often still needs sorting and cleaning, and the output market can be unstable. Yale’s piece notes that pyrolysis can be profitable depending on the plastic type and oil price, but it is not the same as returning material to the production cycle. Shell’s rollback of a major pyrolysis target also shows how market demand, feedstock limits, and regulatory uncertainty can change the business case fast.
Profitability depends on five things
Profit factor | Recycling and granulation | Pyrolysis into oil |
Feedstock cost | Works best with clean, sorted waste | Needs enough suitable waste and often more preprocessing |
Product price | Pellet price can be steadier in mature markets | Oil price can move up and down with energy markets |
Plant complexity | Lower | Higher |
Permit and compliance risk | Usually lower | Usually higher |
Buyer trust | Easier for material buyers to understand | Depends on whether buyers accept the oil as a reliable input |
The JRC assessment is useful here because it says the preferred option should be based on the actual management conditions, and that some physical and chemical recycling routes may already be economically viable without public support in some cases. That means there is no universal winner. The better option depends on feedstock, scale, plant design, and the local market.

A simple decision rule you can use
Use recycling and granulation when:
the plastic is clean, sorted, and mostly one type;
you can make a consistent pellet;
you have a nearby buyer base;
you want lower technical risk.
Use pyrolysis when:
the plastic is mixed, dirty, or hard to granulate profitably;
you have cheap and stable feedstock;
you have strong offtake for the oil or downstream products;
you can handle higher energy use, higher complexity, and more policy risk.
Historical timeline that shaped the market
Year | What happened | Why it matters |
2021 | JRC published a combined environmental and economic assessment of mechanical, physical, and chemical recycling options. | It framed the debate around real-world economics, not just theory. |
2021 | A life-cycle study found pyrolysis had lower climate impact than energy recovery, but mechanical recycling and pyrolysis could be similar when recyclate quality is considered. | It showed the result depends on what you compare against. () |
2024 | NIST said mechanical recycling is typically the most beneficial option and chemical recycling is usually secondary and more capital-intensive. | This reflects the current mainstream technical view. |
2024 | Shell said its plan to turn 1 million tonnes of plastic waste a year into pyrolysis oil by 2025 was unfeasible. | That is a strong market signal about scale and uncertainty. |
2025 | New reviews kept reporting high pyrolysis conversion potential, but also continued to stress economics, emissions, and process limits. | The technology is real, but not automatically the better business. () |
2026 | AP reported the EPA was considering a rule change that could ease pyrolysis regulation. | Policy risk is still a live issue for investors. |
Bottom line
So, is plastic recycling and granulation better than pyrolysis into oil?
For most buyers, yes. If you can feed the plant clean plastic and sell pellets reliably, recycling and granulation usually give you a clearer, safer business path. The plant is easier to run, easier to explain to customers, and closer to the real circular economy model.
Pyrolysis is better only in the right niche. It can be the stronger option when the waste is too mixed or contaminated for mechanical recycling and when oil sales, feedstock supply, and permitting all line up. Even then, the margin can be fragile because the business depends on energy cost, oil price, and regulation.
My practical conclusion is this: choose granulation for clean plastic and choose pyrolysis for difficult plastic only when the business case is proven with real feedstock, real buyers, and real permits. That is the safest way to think about profit, not just process.
Q&A
Q1: Is pyrolysis always more profitable than granulation?
No. Profit depends on feedstock quality, oil price, energy cost, and offtake. Current sources show that pyrolysis can work, but it is not automatically the better business.
Q2: Why do many experts still prefer mechanical recycling?
Because it usually has lower environmental impact and keeps material in the production cycle, which is the core idea of recycling.
Q3: What kind of plastic is best for granulation?
Clean, sorted plastics with steady composition, especially common single-polymer streams such as PET and HDPE.
Q4: What kind of plastic is best for pyrolysis?
Mixed or hard-to-recycle plastic that is difficult to sell as pellets, as long as the plant can secure enough suitable feedstock and a buyer for the oil. ()
Q5: What is the biggest mistake buyers make?
They compare machine prices instead of full business risk. The real issue is scale, contamination, energy use, product quality, and whether the output can actually be sold. ()
Q6: Should a new investor start with pyrolysis first?
Usually not, unless the feedstock and sales contracts are already proven. For many projects, granulation is the simpler and safer first move.


