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How SMX Is Turning Trash Into Trade-and Leading a Global Rebalancing
ACCESS Newswire · SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

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MIAMI, FL / ACCESS Newswire / April 21, 2025 / It's not hyperbole to say we're standing on the edge of a plastics reckoning. The quiet crisis now shaping the global economy isn't just about garbage-it's about geopolitics, trade, and control. And while the West was busy staying fat and happy, binge-consuming like it was 1985, the rest of the world got busy rewriting the rules of manufacturing and sustainability.

Let's rewind. Back in the '80s, Western nations did what they do best: consume. And the rest of the world played along-manufacturing, accepting trash exports, and getting the short end of every stick. It was the golden era of offshoring responsibility. Plastic waste? Put it on a ship. Out of sight, out of mind.

But while the West dozed off, lulled by the illusion of infinite convenience, countries like China, Vietnam, and Indonesia weren't just sorting through refuse. Behind the ports, their IT teams and industrialists quietly retooled to create their futures-building manufacturing muscle, lowering energy costs, and optimizing supply chains. They didn't just accept the West's trash-they learned from it. And now, they're using that knowledge to dictate their own terms.

Plastic for Sale...How 'Bout Free?...Please, take it!

Fast forward to 2025: They don't want our plastic anymore. Why should they? They can make better, cheaper, virgin-grade plastic themselves. Meanwhile, the West is left holding the bag-literally. And that bag is full of waste no one wants, costs more than ever to bury, and is now in such oversupply that it's ironically the cheapest source of raw plastic available. If only it could be used. Houston, they have a problem.

And the paradox? The West still consumes more plastic than ever, but now has nowhere to send it, no ability to trace it, and no infrastructure to reclaim it. And the few countries who could help aren't keen to hold bail water for the U.S.'s sinking ship. This isn't just a trade issue. It's a wake-up call.

So what's next? Here's a radical idea: take responsibility. If the West can't export its waste, maybe it should reclaim it. Treat it as an opportunity-not a burden. And maybe, just maybe, the solution isn't eliminating plastic-it's managing it intelligently.

And that's where SMX Ltd. (NASDAQ:SMX) storms in, waving not just a solution but an entirely new framework for how the world thinks about materials, manufacturing, and waste. SMX is bringing intelligence to plastic at the molecular level-literally.