Company: SEAH
Filing Date: 2025-11-24
Form Type: F-1/A
Source: 0001213900-25-113788
Chunk: 85

Company: Seahawk Recycling Holdings, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-11-24
Form: F-1/A
Chunk 85
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 500,000 tonnes of electrical products containing rare metals by 2030, representing a 50% increase over the 2020 level. Furthermore, concerning the waste and inferior products produced during the manufacturing of batteries and components, which has already reached 3,000 tonnes in 2023, the government intends to revise the Law for Promotion of Effective Utilization of Resources in 2025. This amendment will require producers to transform these wastes into usable resources, aiming to decrease exports and safeguard valuable metals like lithium, nickel, and cobalt from being lost to foreign markets. Besides, regarding the recycling of plastics, the European Commission has updated the End -of -LifeVehicle Regulations to mandate the incorporation of a specific percentage of recycled plastics in automobile manufacturing. Vehicles that fail to meet these regulations will not be permitted for sale within the European Union. In response, the Japanese government is accelerating the creation of a supply chain for recycled plastics that includes automakers, dismantlers, and recycling organizations to gradually increase the proportion of recycled plastics used in new car models in Japan while aligning with legislative requirements to strengthen its competitive position in the global automotive market. Overall, in pursuit of its sustainable development objectives, Japan is steadily improving the recycling and resource recovery rates across multiple sectors while also broadening application scenarios to consistently strengthen the resource recycling chain from production through to reuse. Japan was among the pioneers in Asia to establish a comprehensive and effective system for waste management with relatively advanced technologies and solutions, including precise material separation and robust recycling initiatives. Concurrently, Japan is enhancing collaboration both regionally and internationally. Domestically, Japan strives to promote sustainable development by integrating urban and rural areas, fostering resource circulation through the Regional Circulating and Ecological Sphere (R -CES) policy, for instance, transferring renewable energy from areas abundant in resources to those that are not, as well as encouraging on -siterecycling of waste to improve resource efficiency. Coupled with financial backing, technology exchange, and cross -regionalindustrial collaboration, it provides substantial market space alongside an environment ripe for technological innovation within recycling enterprises. Meanwhile, Japan is committed to enhancing the global reach of local enterprises, offering financial assistance for feasibility studies and technology advancement. The country has invested in initiatives aimed at establishing projects like plastics and automobiles recycling, as well as power generation from waste in developing nations across Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines, facilitated through organizations and programs like the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and the Joint Crediting Mechanism (J