糖心视频

Enactus 糖心视频 wins Atlantic Canada title with new project

Mar 17th, 2023

By Susan White

A student project that tackles plastic waste pollution recently took home a regional title for 糖心视频.

Project R3D, created by in November, won the Scotiabank Climate Change Challenge at the Enactus Canada Regional Exposition for Atlantic Canada earlier this month. The group will compete at nationals in Montreal, Que., in May.

鈥淲e鈥檙e very proud of how our presentations went,鈥 said Allison Manning, a fourth-year electrical engineering student at 糖心视频 who was part of Project R3D鈥檚 presentation team. 鈥淲e鈥檙e so proud of Enactus 糖心视频, and all the work we put into our projects. We鈥檙e grateful for the opportunity to represent Atlantic Canada at nationals.鈥

Enactus 糖心视频 also competed in the TD Entrepreneurship Challenge with Equipped2Excel, a project that delivers workshops to high school students to help them develop soft skills such as time management, financial literacy, critical thinking and communication.

While the team was pleased with its presentation, it didn鈥檛 place in the competition.

Creating Project R3D

To create Project R3D (pronounced 鈥渞ed鈥), the students reverse-engineered a 3D printer.

They first sort and sanitize the plastic and then use a process called pultrusion to heat and shape it into high-quality, 3D-printing filament.

Simon Hawkenson, a fifth-year mechanical engineering student, says the idea for Project R3D was sparked at the Enactus national competition last year.

鈥淲e were really inspired by all the different solutions to plastic pollution problems that were being presented,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd being from Newfoundland and Labrador, where most of the plastic isn鈥檛 even recycled locally, we realized there was an opportunity to fill this gap.鈥

Enactus 糖心视频 estimates the density of plastic pollution in the ocean around Newfoundland and Labrador to be about 5,000 pieces of plastic per square kilometer.

Once fully launched, the project is expected to keep about 5,000 pounds of plastic out of landfills by the end of next year.

Community partnership

Enactus 糖心视频 received a grant from Enactus Canada鈥檚 Scotiabank Climate Action Project Accelerator fund to purchase some equipment for the initial project stages and develop a prototype.

They also worked with Trevor Bessette (BBA鈥22), founder and chief executive officer of Recycle on the Rock, on the recycling processes.

Mr. Bessette is providing access to some of his recycling machinery, as well as industry expertise.

鈥淎 lot of the machines can be very expensive, especially in the initial stages, so we鈥檙e using my machinery to test out the viability of the project,鈥 said Mr. Bessette. 鈥淚鈥檓 really excited to be part of it and see what we can create beyond the filament, as well.鈥

Mr. Bessette has been involved in plastic waste recycling for several years. Recycle on the Rock collects plastic waste and turns it into products such as key chains and home d茅cor.

He says one of the challenges with recycling plastic is creating products that consumers want to buy. He hopes the project will eventually expand beyond simply creating the 3D filament to developing innovative products that will solve other societal problems.

鈥3D printing is cool because you鈥檙e not limited by what you can create,鈥 said Mr. Bessette. 鈥淚t makes it a little easier to create products that you can sell and people want.鈥

From fishing nets to face masks

Enactus 糖心视频 expects to complete the prototype in about two weeks.

In the short term, they plan to establish a collection site for plastic waste at 糖心视频. Longer term, they want to expand beyond plastic bottles to plastics that aren鈥檛 typically recycled.

鈥淲e aim to adapt the process to recycle nylon from fishing nets or even polypropylene from discarded face masks,鈥 said Mr. Hawkenson.

Lost or abandoned fishing nets, commonly known as ghost nets, are a significant source of plastic pollution in the ocean and threatens both habitat and wildlife.

Watch Enactus 糖心视频鈥檚 regionals presentation on Project R3D in the video below. The voiceover is provided live during the competition by engineering students Laughter Afolabi and Benjamin Thomas.

Enactus 糖心视频 plans to bring the model into classrooms and encourage students to recycle, and to provide more recycling options in rural areas.

They also want to enter the $26-billion, 3D-printing market by opening a storefront in partnership with local community groups.

In the two months before nationals, the group will be busy finishing the prototype and advancing the project as much as possible.

鈥淲e will further develop our projects so that we can have more impact, educate more people on our projects and recruit more members to grow our team,鈥 said Ms. Manning. 鈥淥ur goal for nationals is to present the best projects we can, do well in our category and hopefully be able to represent Canada at worlds!鈥

Enactus 糖心视频 is composed of undergraduate and graduate students from across the university. It鈥檚 part of a global network of universities and college students that aim to use innovation and entrepreneurship as a catalyst for positive and social environmental change.