Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    Industry announcements for January 2026

    Industry announcements for May 2026

    Apple store

    Apple leads on inputs, faces questions on ITAD

    Unlocking the power of source reduction in US EPR

    Unlocking the power of source reduction in US EPR

    Following petition, Microsoft extends Windows 10 support

    Windows AI Recall is pushing data destruction upstream

    Certification Scorecard — Week of April 27, 2026

    Five trends shaping PCR packaging to 2031

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
      • All Topics
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    Industry announcements for January 2026

    Industry announcements for May 2026

    Apple store

    Apple leads on inputs, faces questions on ITAD

    Unlocking the power of source reduction in US EPR

    Unlocking the power of source reduction in US EPR

    Following petition, Microsoft extends Windows 10 support

    Windows AI Recall is pushing data destruction upstream

    Certification Scorecard — Week of April 27, 2026

    Five trends shaping PCR packaging to 2031

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
      • All Topics
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home Analysis Opinion

The View from ISRI: It’s time to bury the landfill option for CRTs

byRobin Wiener, the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries
September 22, 2016
in Opinion
The View from ISRI: It’s time to bury the landfill option for CRTs

Robin Wiener

Even after being in the scrap recycling industry for over 25 years, I am still amazed at how often we have to reeducate policymakers about the business. Despite long-standing industry efforts to distinguish scrap recycling from waste disposal, many still confuse scrap recyclers with solid and hazardous waste companies.

Regulators, especially at the state and local levels, see secondary materials being used as inputs at recycling operations and reflexively tend to regulate materials as solid or hazardous waste, or they deem recycling facilities as solid or hazardous waste facilities without understanding the specifics of the operations.

For instance, during the recent federal rulemaking on the Definition of Solid Waste, the proposed rule included several unnecessary, onerous requirements for recyclers of scrap metal that were based on regulators’ misunderstandings about recycling.

Leading up to the creation of the final rule last year, the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries met with the Environmental Protection Agency to clarify how the industry operates and recycles scrap metal. The eventual final rule essentially maintained the pre-rulemaking federal exclusion and exemption for recycled scrap metal, as well as the conditional recycling exclusions from solid waste for CRTs and CRT glass.

Undermining 20 years of CRT efforts

Given all this recent activity and focus, imagine how surprised and somewhat dismayed we are to learn that certain original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and their contractors are now asking to get recycling credit when CRT material is used as alternative daily cover at disposal sites or placed into “retrievable storage” at landfills.

These activities are not recycling, and they undermine 20-plus years of efforts by policymakers, NGOs and the recycling industry to keep CRTs out of the landfill.

Our members understand that CRTs are tough to recycle because of the costs. Unlike more traditional streams, such as used vehicles and refrigerators, there is a cost to responsibly recycle the leaded glass from a CRT, and nobody wants to pay more.

In this instance, ISRI supports policy that requires the OEMs to pay for the collection and recycling of a negative-value product. And 24 states have agreed with us. As a means to enhance the recycling of the metal (which accounts for 29 percent of the weight of a typical used CRT monitor), plastic (13 percent of a monitor) and glass (around 58 percent of a monitor), OEMs have a statutory obligation to foot the bill.

Furthermore, there are increased concerns about the downward economic pressure that many state OEM take-back laws have had on the CRT glass market.

While we support a competitive marketplace, we cannot tolerate policies and state OEM action plans that have effectively driven the CRT market into stockpiled warehouses across the country. We know that OEMs are not solely to blame. Recyclers have taken bad deals that they should not have accepted, and state enforcement has been extremely lax. In addition, the federal speculative accumulation rule has acted as an enabler to legally move piles around from one warehouse to the next.

OEMs should cover actual costs

So what’s the solution? The solution is to recycle the glass. OEMs must be required to pay the actual costs associated with recycling CRT monitors. Recyclers must stop taking deals that do not cover the actual costs. State and federal enforcement needs to be dramatically enhanced.

The idea that approved OEM plans can allow CRTs to be stockpiled in warehouses with little to no hope of recycling makes a mockery of the entire program.

We all know the global market has changed. Glass-to-glass manufacturing markets have been replaced with glass-to-lead, glass-to-copper, and glass as a raw material substitute to make ceramics and tiles. But the issue is still about costs, not capacity. We should not allow companies to hide behind the argument that these markets are inadequate in order to shirk their fiscal and statutory responsibilities.

Similar to the hard-fought CRT glass exclusion, companies have relied on the state programs to invest in technologies and business models designed to responsibly recycle CRT monitors. Undermining such investments and 20 years of pro-recycling policy is not the solution. Nor is allowing OEMs or any of their downstream recyclers to get recycling credit for putting a CRT monitor into a landfill in one form or another.

We can and should expect much more as a recycling industry. The longstanding ISRI policy that “scrap is not waste, and recycling is not disposal” should continue to be the guiding principle.

Robin Wiener is the president of the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries. She can be contacted at [email protected].

Tags: CRTsMarkets
TweetShare
Robin Wiener, the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries

Robin Wiener, the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries

Related Posts

Fiber producers push for June price increases

Fiber producers push for June price increases

byAntoinette Smith
May 5, 2026

Ahead of the announcements, International Paper, Smurfit Westrock and others pointed to a sudden rise in demand, higher costs and...

Volatility reshapes outlook for US metals businesses

byScott Snowden
April 15, 2026

Panelists at the ReMA conference in Las Vegas said tariffs, reshoring and geopolitical tension are remaking trade flows, lifting US...

NERC launches hub to promote PCR demand 

byAntoinette Smith
April 15, 2026

The Northeast Recycling Council's PCR Material Demand Hub offers resources for government procurement, material- and product-specific resources, and certification and...

Industry group: Help us find the plastic bale volumes we need

PET bales sink further as other grades firm 

byRecyclingMarkets.net Staff
April 15, 2026

Pricing for HDPE and PP bales rose again, while PET bales remained low, film grades have steadied, and paper and...

Lead battery recycling market set for steady growth

byScott Snowden
April 14, 2026

The global lead battery recycling market is projected to grow steadily through 2034, supported by regulation, automotive replacement cycles and...

GFL acquires SECURE Waste for $6.4bn

byStefanie Valentic
April 13, 2026

GFL Environmental has agreed to acquire SECURE Waste Infrastructure Corp. in a $6.4 billion deal that expands the waste hauler's...

Load More
Next Post
Jim Puckett

The View from BAN: GPS tracking an industry game-changer

More Posts

New version of California EPR regulations released

CalRecycle approves SB 54 regulations

May 2, 2026

What Netflix’s ‘Plastic Detox’ gets wrong – and right

April 23, 2026
Plastic Ingenuity to use PureCycle PP for coffee lids

Plastic Ingenuity to use PureCycle PP for coffee lids

April 30, 2026
Intel sign on company building with blue sky and trees.

Intel boosts margins by selling what it used to scrap

April 29, 2026
EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

Oregon DEQ flags 250 producers for RMA noncompliance

April 21, 2026
Unlocking the power of source reduction in US EPR

Unlocking the power of source reduction in US EPR

May 1, 2026
Our top stories from April 2022

Peters-Michaud named CEO, Houghton chair of Sage Sustainable Electronics

April 28, 2026
Float-sink technology at the Quantum Lifecycle Partners facility in Toronto, Canada enables the processing of e-plastics.

E-plastics recovery line opens in Canada

April 28, 2026
Birch Plastics gets FDA green-light for post-industrial PP

LyondellBasell upgrade to PreZero assets on hold

April 23, 2026
Intel sign outside of company building.

What Intel’s blockbuster quarter means for ITAD

April 27, 2026
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Policy Now
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.