By NicetyMachine.com | April 1, 2026
1. SPE Awards Hybrid Composite EV Battery Housing

The Society of Plastics Engineers (SPE) recognized a next-generation hybrid composite EV battery housing at its Automotive Awards ceremony in Bonn, Germany. Developed by SABIC and Forward Engineering, the design uses a multilayer sandwich of Tepex® Dynalite polypropylene glass-fiber sheets and a PP STAMAX™ tray. The enclosure achieves a 10–20% weight reduction and up to 30% lower production costs compared with traditional all-metal designs. SABIC’s MEGAMOLDING™ platform enables single-shot molding of the large-format part, eliminating multiple post-processing steps and integrating cooling and reinforcement zones in one operation.
Source: Plastics Engineering – March 23, 2026
2. BASF Raises Polyamide Prices $0.20/lb in North America

Effective April 1, 2026, BASF is increasing prices for caprolactam, polyamide 6 (PA6), and copolyamide (PA6,66) by $0.20 per pound across North America. The company cited ongoing volatility across the nylon value chain and warned that further adjustments may follow. The move comes as multiple producers, including AdvanSix and Ascend, simultaneously raised polyamide pricing, signaling broad margin pressure across the engineering resin supply chain.
Source: BASF Press Release – March 23, 2026
3. North American Plastics Machinery Shipments Rise 7% in Q4

North American plastics machinery shipments increased 7% in Q4 2025, driven by gains in single-screw extrusion and injection molding that offset a decline in twin-screw extrusion shipments. Industry economists noted that sectors such as construction, which lagged in prior years, could outperform in 2026 as borrowing costs decline, generating increased demand for plastics equipment. The report reflects continued underlying investment in processing capacity despite broader macroeconomic headwinds.
Source: Plastics Technology – March 17, 2026
4. Coperion Launches New PET Recycling System at Chinaplas 2026

Coperion will debut a new standardized PET recycling system at Chinaplas 2026, capable of throughputs from 500 kg/h up to 10 tonnes per hour. The system is designed for bottle-to-bottle, bottle-to-sheet, bottle-to-fiber, and tray recycling applications. When combined with a solid-state polycondensation (SSP) reactor, the line can produce PET recompounds approved for direct food contact under EFSA or FDA standards. The company will also exhibit its upgraded STS 96 Mc PLUS twin-screw extruder, which delivers up to 20% higher throughput over previous configurations.
5. Plastics Recycling Sector Faces Cost Pressure, Consolidation Push

The global plastics recycling industry is under mounting operational pressure as costs rise, regulatory demands intensify, and markets require greater scale and compliance. Industry figures are calling this a pivotal moment for consolidation, where control over the full value chain will determine which companies survive. Dutch recycler DiDoSa has already taken an early step, acquiring a compounding operation in the Netherlands that will operate as Delta Compounding. Analysts expect further merger and acquisition activity throughout 2026 as independent operators struggle to compete on their own.
Source: IndexBox / Recycling International – March 26, 2026
6. Resin Prices Mostly Up in April; Tariff and Middle East Uncertainty Loom
April 2026 opens with most volume resin prices trending upward against a turbulent backdrop. The US Supreme Court’s February ruling invalidated many Trump-era import tariffs, but the administration immediately implemented a 15% stop-gap tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, which expires in July. Simultaneously, the outbreak of US-Israel conflict against Iran in late February raised fears over Strait of Hormuz shipping disruptions, which handle a significant share of regional petrochemical exports. Nylon 6, polycarbonate, and ABS pricing remain particularly in flux as suppliers push for hikes while demand in key sectors stays soft.
Source: Plastics Technology – April 2026 Resin Report
7. Plastic Compounding Machinery Market to Hit $9.45B in 2026

The global plastic compounding machinery market is projected to reach $9.45 billion in 2026, growing at a CAGR of 6.73% to reach $13.09 billion by 2031. Twin-screw extruders hold roughly 46% of global revenue due to their mixing versatility. Growth is being driven by stricter recycled-content mandates, rising traceability requirements for medical devices, and expanding on-site compounding lines within EV battery plants. Asia-Pacific leads volume growth as China’s modified-plastics penetration climbs, while Europe is driving technology refreshes through aggressive packaging-waste regulations.
Source: Mordor Intelligence – Plastic Compounding Machinery Market, 2026
8. Arburg Pauses US Manufacturing Plans, Advances in China

German injection molding machine maker Arburg has placed its US manufacturing expansion plans on hold as tariff uncertainty complicates investment decisions. The announcement came during Arburg’s 2026 Technology Days event. At the same time, the company is pushing forward with new production and engineering capabilities in China. Arburg also confirmed it will showcase its new TREND all-electric injection molding machine — launched at K 2025 — at the upcoming Interplas 2026 exhibition, with clamping forces ranging from 50 to 200 tonnes.
Sources: Plastics News – March 2026 | Interplas Insights – March 2026
9. AMI Compounding & Recycling Expo Set for Frankfurt, September 2026
AMI will hold its Compounding & Recycling Expo on September 23–24, 2026, at Messe Frankfurt, Germany. The free-to-attend event is positioned as Europe’s premier platform for the compounding and recycling supply chain, bringing together machinery suppliers, raw material producers, recyclers, compounders, and OEMs. Conference sessions will cover market trends, technical innovations, and regulatory developments. Frankfurt was chosen for its central role in Europe’s plastics economy — Germany is the continent’s largest plastics producer and consumer.
Source: AMI Events
10. Plastics Industry Faces Triple Threat: Oil Prices, Labor Shortages, Tariff Uncertainty
Industry advisor Laurie Harbour of Wipfli Advisory LLC has warned that the plastics sector faces a convergence of pressures in 2026: rising oil prices driving up resin and transportation costs, persistent labor shortages, and ongoing tariff-related uncertainty. Despite flat or declining revenue projections, many processors are continuing to hire without optimizing capacity utilization. Harbour cited one molder operating at just 35% capacity while adding 40 employees at a Mexico plant. She projects moderate industry growth of 2–3% in 2026 but cautioned that instability in tariff policy — particularly when Section 122 expires in July — could dampen equipment investment and strategic planning.
Source: PlasticsToday – March 2026
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