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SMX at NAFRA: A Signal to Recyclers That Industrial Traceability Is Finally Arriving
NAFRA's renewed engagement places SMX on the radar of the operators who feel the impact most
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 10, 2025 / Recyclers live with the consequences of every upstream decision. When manufacturers introduce additives, colorants, and flame retardants into plastics, recyclers inherit the complexity. They are the ones forced to manage contamination, comply with regulations, and absorb the cost of sorting materials that cannot be reliably identified.
Flame-retardant plastics sit at the center of this problem. They are essential for safety but difficult to classify, and they often move straight to disposal because existing technologies cannot separate them with consistent accuracy. That is why SMX's (NASDAQ:SMX) return to the NAFRA forum sends a powerful signal downstream.
Recyclers pay attention when leadership bodies highlight a tool that has solved a longstanding bottleneck. Earlier this year, SMX demonstrated industrial-speed sorting with 99%-100% accuracy, including for carbon-black materials that near-infrared systems routinely miss. That level of performance does not just improve throughput. It changes the economics of entire material categories.
The renewed invitation suggests that NAFRA sees this technology as more than a technical achievement. It is something the industry should understand because it addresses one of the most expensive and persistent challenges recyclers face. For operators working with thin margins and rising compliance costs, the ability to quickly and accurately identify flame-retardant plastics is not incremental. It is transformative.
Unlocking Value That Has Been Lost for Decades
Most recyclers do not dispose of flame-retardant plastics because they want to. They do it because they cannot certify the output. Without reliable identification, these materials cannot enter higher-value streams. They are treated as risk, not opportunity. SMX's system changes that dynamic. By assigning identity at the molecular level and carrying that identity through a digital passport, recyclers gain access to the data required to classify materials with confidence and match them with buyers who need verified input.
This does more than reduce waste. It restores value that has been locked out of the circular economy. When a material can be certified, it can be resold. When it can be resold, it supports additional recovery capacity. When recovery capacity increases, circularity becomes more than a policy goal. It becomes a financial advantage. SMX's accuracy results show that flame-retardant plastics, previously considered too complex to manage efficiently, can be reintroduced into circulation under controlled, verifiable conditions.
NAFRA bringing SMX back into a public-facing industry program broadcasts that reality. It tells recyclers that a solution exists, that it works at the speeds they operate, and that the technology has been validated by the same organizations that shape compliance standards. The message is not that adoption has arrived. The message is that the conversation has entered the stage where recyclers should be paying attention.
The Beginning of a New Operational Baseline
For years, recyclers have relied on patchwork detection systems, manual sorting, and conservative disposal rules that prioritize safety over recovery. These processes were necessary because no scalable alternative existed. SMX introduces a different baseline. Identity is embedded, not inferred. Verification is instantaneous, not approximate. Sorting becomes systematic, not interpretive. This creates a new foundation for how downstream operators can plan, invest, and grow.
The renewed engagement from NAFRA suggests that this baseline may become part of a larger structural shift. When industry leadership bodies begin showcasing a technology, it signals to recyclers that the design of future workflows is changing. Systems built around guesswork are giving way to systems built around precision. Recyclers who adapt early often secure the strongest economic and strategic positions because they understand emerging standards before they become requirements.
Today's invitation brings SMX into that early awareness cycle. It positions the company as part of the next chapter in how recyclers manage flame-retardant materials, comply with evolving policies, and capture value that used to slip through their facilities. For recyclers, this moment should read clearly. Industrial-strength traceability is no longer theoretical. It is taking shape, and the industry leaders are bringing it forward.
About SMX
As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.
Forward-Looking Statements
This communication contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the Company's expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions, or strategies regarding the future. In addition, any statements that refer to projections, forecasts, events, or circumstances that SMX expects, believes, or anticipates will or may occur in the future, including statements relating to the Company's business strategy, financial position, future operations, future revenues, projected costs, prospects, plans, and objectives of management, as well as statements regarding the Company's liquidity position, capital needs, anticipated financing timelines, expected dilution, future share issuances, the anticipated use of proceeds, expected performance of the amended financing agreement, market conditions, adoption of the Company's technology, commercial pipeline, regulatory approvals, industry trends, competitive position, and any assumptions underlying the foregoing, are forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements are based on the Company's current expectations and assumptions regarding future events and are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties, and factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, risks relating to: the Company's ability to successfully execute its operating plans; the Company's ability to obtain additional financing on acceptable terms or at all; the Company's ability to maintain compliance with Nasdaq listing standards; market conditions and volatility in the trading price of the Company's ordinary shares; dilution that may result from the Company's existing financing arrangements; the Company's ability to access capital under the standby equity purchase agreement and related amendments; the timing and occurrence of any closings under such agreements; the Company's expectations regarding its financial runway and future capital needs; risks associated with the Company's ability to scale its technology, secure customer adoption, or convert pilot programs into commercial deployments; risks relating to supply chain conditions and global economic trends; the Company's dependence on key personnel; the Company's ability to maintain intellectual property protection and defend against infringement claims; changes in applicable laws and regulations; general economic, political, and market conditions; risks relating to digital asset markets and the Company's potential future acquisition or holding of digital assets; and other factors detailed from time to time in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), including the Company's Annual Report on Form 20-F and its subsequent reports filed with the SEC.
Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date they are made and are not guarantees of future performance. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by applicable law. Actual results may differ materially from those anticipated due to various risks and uncertainties, and all forward-looking statements contained herein are qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement.
EMAIL: [email protected]
SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
M.O.Allen--AT