A STRETCH of the Ceredigion coast road has been resurfaced using recycled nappies.

A new initiative between eco-friendly baby care business Pura and complete nappy recycling experts NappiCycle, with support from the Welsh Government, is seeing used nappies repurposed for a road resurfacing trial in Wales.

The innovative new road surface opens to the public this week along a 1.4 mile stretch of the A487 in Llanarth.

The new roadway will contain more than 107,000 used nappies, finding a useful purpose for some of the 3 billion nappies annually disposed of in the UK. More than 400,000 tonnes of disposable nappy waste ends-up in landfill each year. Used can nappies take up to 500 years to degrade – outliving the babies they were used on.

For the road resurfacing project, a total of 4.3 tonnes of recovered fibre from the nappies was added to the bitumen that glues together asphalt road surfaces. The “nappy-enhanced” asphalt is even more durable than standard asphalt, but with a reduced carbon footprint - providing a green solution to road re-surfacing for the Welsh Government.

nappies in the road
Fibres from old nappies are used as part of the new surface (Pura)

Rob Poyer, founder of NappiCycle, developed a cost-effective process for recycling nappies in 2009. Used nappies are cleansed, and plastics and cellulose fibres separated for re-use. 100% of the soiled nappies are processed, so absolutely nothing is sent to landfill (even the urine extracted from the nappies is even reutilised)!

The recovered cellulose can be repurposed not just for road surfacing, but for notice boards for schools and offices, panelling, under laminate flooring and other insulation.

Award-winning baby care brand Pura, led by entrepreneur Guy Fennell, teamed up with NappiCycle in 2020.

Already leading the fight to removing plastic from baby wipes, Pura’ NappiCycle partnership was a logical progression as Guy sought to find a more circular solution for wipes and nappy waste.

Since forming the partnership, Guy has frequently addressed politicians about the environmental problems posed by nappy waste, earning him the mantle “The Nappy Guy”.

Nappies in the road
The resurfacing work taking place in Llanarth (Pura)

Together, Pura NappiCycle already prevents more than 800,000 nappies from being landfilled in Wales every single week.  Guy’s mission is to now bring nappy recycling to the entire UK, starting with a nappy recycling trial in Bristol which is set to launch in the coming months.

Commenting on the initiative, Guy said: “Pura provides parents with nappy change essentials that are kind to their baby and their planet, while still being affordable and convenient.

“Despite extensive research, the technology for the perfect eco-friendly disposable nappy unfortunately doesn’t exist yet.  As we seek that solution, we are determined to drive change and minimise the damage nappies are having on the planet. That’s why it was crucial that we partner with NappiCycle and make nappy recycling a reality for all UK parents.

“The road resurfacing is just one fantastic example of how recycled nappies - that would have otherwise ended up in landfill - can be put to really good use.”

Rob Poyer, NappiCycle founder, adds: “This type of road surface material has huge potential for producing more sustainable roadways with a lower carbon impact.  With this trial we hope to demonstrate that waste nappies could be widely adopted in our roads, not just here in Wales, but right around the UK.”