Think Your Plastic is Being Recycled?
By Jen Hayden
Sept.18, 2013--Think those plastic items you carefully separate from the rest of your
trash are being responsibly recycled?
Think again.
U.S. recycling
companies have largely stayed away from recycling plastic and most of it
has been shipped to China where it can be processed cheaper.
Not
anymore.
This year China announced a Green Fence Policy, prohibiting
much of the plastic recycling they once imported.
For many environmentally conscious Americans, there’s a deep
satisfaction to chucking anything and everything plasticky into the
recycling bin—from shampoo bottles to butter tubs—the types of plastics
in the plastic categories #3 through #7.
Little do they know that, even
if their local trash collector says it recycles that waste, they might
as well be chucking those plastics in the trash bin.
“Plastics are absolutely going to a landfill—China's is not
taking plastics any more… because of Green Fence,” David Kaplan, CEO of
Maine Plastics, a post-industrial recycler, tells Quartz. “This will
continue until we can do it in the United States economically.”
U.S. recyclers are scrambling to come up with a solution now that China is drastically cutting back on their top import from the U.S.
China's demand for low-cost recycled raw materials has meant
waste shipments from Europe, the US, Japan and Hong Kong have arrived
thick and fast, with scrap becoming the top US export to China by value
($11.3bn) in 2011.
China controls a large portion of the recycling market, importing
about 70% of the world's 500m tonnes of electronic waste and 12m tonnes
of plastic waste each year.
Sudden Chinese policy changes therefore have
a significant impact on the global recycling trade, which puts pressure
on western countries to reconsider their reliance on the cost-effective
practice of exporting waste, a habit that's reinforced by a lack of
domestic recycling infrastructure and a lower demand for secondary raw
materials.
China's Green Fence policy just might spur the U.S. government and recyclers into much-needed U.S. government and recyclers into much-needed innovation.
Historically, higher labor costs and environmental safety
standards made processing scrap into raw materials much more expensive
in the US than in China. So the US never developed much capacity or
technology to sort and process harder-to-break down plastics like #3
through #7.
Green Fence might be a chance to change that, says Mike Biddle, CEO
of California-based recycling company MBA Polymers.
“China’s Green Fence
offers a real opportunity to the US government and recycling industry
to step up its efforts on recycling and catalyze a strong domestic
recycling market in the US,” Biddle said at a recent webinar on Green
Fence.
Some U.S. recycling companies are applauding the news.
The policy also has leveled the playing field by allowing
large-scale companies that have invested additional money in pollution
control and recycling services to operate at a more equal and fair-cost
level, according to Kathy Xuan, CEO of full-service recycler Parc Corp.
of Romeoville, Ill.
With China taking a harder look at the plastic waste it imports,
U.S.-based recyclers are looking for opportunities in the changing
global market.
Parc has doubled production in the last six months, Xuan said in a
July 2 webinar hosted by the Society of the Plastics Industry Inc. of
Washington.
The opportunity for big change (and big profits) is there.
Let's hope
the U.S. government and recycling companies don't throw away the
opportunity to lead the way.
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