Knowledge Base

Plastic Credits Revenue Path

Draft Medium Research 1,118 words Created Mar 4, 2026

Plastic Credits Revenue Path — Getting Paid to Clean the Ocean

Plastic credits are the primary near-term revenue mechanism for The Claw. One credit = one tonne (or kilogram, depending on the standard) of plastic collected, processed, or diverted from the environment. Companies buy them to offset their plastic footprint.


1. The Plastic Credit Market

What Are Plastic Credits?

A plastic credit certifies that a specific quantity of plastic waste has been collected, processed, or recycled. Companies purchase credits to offset the plastic they produce — similar to how carbon credits offset emissions. The buyer doesn't physically handle the plastic; they fund the cleanup operation through the credit purchase.

Market Standards

StandardIssuer1 Credit =Focus
Plastic Waste Reduction StandardVerra1 tonne collected or recycledBroadest standard. Collection + recycling methodologies.
Ocean Bound Plastic (OBP)Zero Plastic Oceans1 kg of OBP removedSpecifically targets plastic at risk of entering the ocean.
Plastic Credit Exchange (PCX)3RI/Plastic Credit Exchange1 tonneMarketplace for trading credits between projects and buyers.
Empower.ecoEmpowerVariesBlockchain-tracked credits with full chain of custody.
CleanHubCleanHub1 kgBrand-facing platform for plastic neutrality claims.

Current Pricing

Credit TypePrice Range (per tonne)Notes
Land-based collection (developing countries)$140–300Cheapest — collection from coastal areas in SE Asia, Africa
Ocean Bound Plastic (OBP)$200–500Premium for "at-risk" plastic near waterways
Recycling credits$300–600Higher value — plastic is actually reprocessed
Ocean cleanup / removal$500–800+Highest premium — plastic removed from open ocean
Verra average range$200–800Depends on project type, location, social impact
PCX marketplace average~$200Mix of project types
World Bank estimate$140–670Context-dependent
Ocean cleanup commands the highest price because: 1. Additionality is obvious — no one else would collect this plastic 2. High cost of operations — ocean collection is genuinely expensive 3. Marketing value — "ocean plastic removed" is a stronger narrative than "coastal collection" 4. Scarcity — very few verified ocean cleanup credits exist


2. Revenue Projections for The Claw

Conservative Scenario ($300/tonne — land-based pricing)

PhaseAnnual ThroughputRevenue
Phase 1 (5 TPD)~940 tonnes$282K
Phase 1 (10 TPD)~1,880 tonnes$564K
Phase 2 (25 TPD)~4,700 tonnes$1.4M
Phase 3 (50 TPD)~9,400 tonnes$2.8M

Moderate Scenario ($600/tonne — ocean cleanup premium)

PhaseAnnual ThroughputRevenue
Phase 1 (5 TPD)~940 tonnes$564K
Phase 1 (10 TPD)~1,880 tonnes$1.1M
Phase 2 (25 TPD)~4,700 tonnes$2.8M
Phase 3 (50 TPD)~9,400 tonnes$5.6M

Premium Scenario ($2,000–5,000/tonne — GPGP-specific premium)

This scenario assumes The Claw can command a significant premium for being the only operation physically removing and destroying plastic from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch — the world's most infamous pollution site.

PhaseAnnual ThroughputRevenue at $2K/tRevenue at $5K/t
Phase 1 (10 TPD)~1,880 tonnes$3.8M$9.4M
Phase 2 (25 TPD)~4,700 tonnes$9.4M$23.5M
Phase 3 (50 TPD)~9,400 tonnes$18.8M$47M
Is $2,000–5,000/tonne realistic? Possibly. Consider:
  • The Ocean Cleanup has raised $100M+ with zero revenue model — pure impact
  • Corporate buyers pay premiums for narrative impact (GPGP is globally recognized)
  • At $5,000/tonne, the buyer is paying $5/kg for verified GPGP plastic destruction — comparable to what consumers pay for "ocean plastic" branded products
  • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) legislation is creating mandatory demand

3. The EPR Tailwind

Extended Producer Responsibility regulations are spreading globally, requiring plastic producers to fund end-of-life management of their products:

JurisdictionEPR StatusRelevance
EUMandatory — Single-Use Plastics Directive + Packaging RegulationEU producers must fund collection/recycling. Credits may qualify.
CanadaProvincial EPR schemes expandingGrowing demand for verified credits.
PhilippinesPlastic credits accepted for EPR complianceDirect precedent — credits satisfy legal obligations.
UKPackaging Extended Producer Responsibility (pEPR) from 2025Large market opening.
IndiaEPR framework for plastic packagingMassive scale market.
CaliforniaSB 54 — requires recycling/composting targetsCould create demand for ocean cleanup credits.
The trend is clear: Governments are forcing companies to pay for their plastic footprint. This creates structural demand for plastic credits that will grow, not shrink.


4. Buyer Market

Who Buys Plastic Credits?

Buyer TypeMotivationBudgetExamples
FMCG companiesOffset packaging footprint$1–50M/yearUnilever, P&G, Nestlé, Coca-Cola
RetailersSupply chain sustainability$0.5–10M/yearWalmart, IKEA, H&M
Tech companiesESG commitments, packaging$1–20M/yearApple, Google, Microsoft
Packaging producersEPR compliance$5–100M/yearBerry Global, Amcor, Sealed Air
Oil/petrochemicalReputational offset for virgin plastic production$10–100M/yearDow, BASF, ExxonMobil
The ocean cleanup narrative is particularly powerful with consumer-facing brands. "We funded the removal of X tonnes of plastic from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch" is a marketing asset worth far more than the credit cost.

Volume Demand

BuyerEstimated Annual Plastic Footprint% OffsetCredits Needed
Coca-Cola~3 million tonnes plastic/year1%30,000 tonnes
Nestlé~1.2 million tonnes1%12,000 tonnes
Unilever~700,000 tonnes1%7,000 tonnes
Even 1% offset from a single major FMCG company exceeds The Claw's Phase 1 capacity. The demand side is not the constraint.


5. Certification Strategy for The Claw

Recommended Approach

1. Register with Verra Plastic Waste Reduction Standard — largest, most recognized 2. Obtain OBP certification — specifically designed for ocean-bound/ocean plastic 3. Engage third-party verifier — annual audit of collection/processing volumes 4. Blockchain tracking (optional) — Empower.eco-style chain of custody for premium buyers

Verification Requirements

RequirementHow The Claw Meets It
QuantificationWeigh scales on collection deck; processing log; slag mass balance
AdditionalityClear — no one else is processing GPGP plastic at sea
PermanencePlasma gasification destroys plastic permanently (not landfill)
No double-countingGPS-tracked collection in international waters; unique serial numbers
Social co-benefitsEmployment, technology transfer, ocean health restoration
The Claw has an unusually strong additionality case. The plastic is 1,000 nm from shore in the middle of the Pacific. Without The Claw, it stays there forever. No baseline scenario involves this plastic being collected by anyone else.


6. Risks

RiskSeverityMitigation
Price volatilityHighForward contracts with buyers; diversify across credit types
Market immaturityMediumStandards are consolidating (Verra leading); market growing fast
Greenwashing backlashMediumTransparent verification; invite media/NGO observers
Regulatory changesLow–MediumEPR trend is strengthening, not weakening demand
Competition from cheap creditsMediumGPGP premium differentiates from coastal collection
Buyer concentrationMediumDiversify across FMCG, tech, packaging, oil sectors

7. Key Finding

Plastic credits alone may not cover Phase 1 OPEX at standard market rates ($200–800/tonne). But:

  • At GPGP-premium rates ($2,000–5,000/tonne), a 10 TPD ship generates $3.8–9.4M/year
  • Stacked with carbon credits, the gap narrows further
  • EPR legislation is creating mandatory demand that will push prices up
  • The narrative value of GPGP cleanup commands premiums that don't exist for coastal collection
The credit revenue model works best at Phase 2+ scale. Phase 1 will likely require supplemental funding (grants, philanthropy, strategic investment) while establishing the credit track record.


Analysis compiled March 2026. Pricing from Verra estimates, World Bank Product Overview, PCX marketplace data, ALLCOT Trading, and Empower.eco. EPR regulatory data from EU Packaging Regulation, UK pEPR, California SB 54, and Philippines EPR framework.