Business
SMX Technology Is a Circularity Engine That Values Materials Through Proof
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 9, 2025 / The mission toward economic Circularity has spent years trapped between ambition and reality. Regulations expanded, sustainability pledges multiplied, and reporting structures grew more complex. ...
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[{"type":"text","content":"NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 9, 2025 / The mission toward economic Circularity has spent years trapped between ambition and reality. Regulations expanded, sustainability pledges multiplied, and reporting structures grew more complex. Yet, the essential problem remained unchanged. The world lacked a way to verify circularity at the material level.","length":361,"tagName":"p"},{"type":"text","content":"Documentation could describe intent. But those words on paper or included on a tag could not survive heat, pressure, melting, blending, or any of the industrial transformations that define modern manufacturing. Because of that, and without a way to ensure persistent identity, circularity could not mature into a functional economic system. That's no longer the case. One company has single-handedly changed that narrative, creating molecular-level embedding technology that has the potential to reshape global trade by providing immutable identity to virtually anything passing through supply chains.","length":605,"tagName":"p"},{"type":"text","content":"SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is that company. And it's demonstrated that this missing layer can now exist. By embedding molecular markers directly into polymers, metals, precious metals, textiles, packaging, and recycled materials, SMX enables each material to become its own record of origin, composition, and history. Circularity became measurable because the material itself provided the proof. That shift did more than close a technology gap. It opened the door to an entirely new economic architecture.","length":499,"tagName":"p"},{"type":"text","content":"True Circularity in Real-Time","length":29,"tagName":"p"},{"type":"text","content":"Circularity long relied on estimates, declarations, sampling, and audits that did not hold up under industrial realities. Recycled content claims could not be verified through multiple melt cycles. Compliance reporting depended on paperwork rather than evidence. Fraud and mislabeling persisted because verification systems were external to the material itself. In this environment, circularity remained a cost center. Something companies pursued to meet regulatory pressure or ESG expectations, but not a framework that generated economic value.","length":546,"tagName":"p"},{"type":"text","content":"That model is beginning to change. The expansion of...
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