The plastics recycling conversation is dominated by supply-side language. Collection rates, processing technology, yield improvement, better sorting, better chemistry, better infrastructure.
Meanwhile, the buyer is still trying to answer a simpler question: What exactly am I purchasing?
That gap matters because the mandate already exists. Global brands, converters and manufacturers are under growing pressure to incorporate post-consumer recycled (PCR) content into packaging and products. Procurement teams are now expected to source recycled material not as an ESG exercise, but as an operational requirement tied to customer commitments, retailer expectations and incoming regulation.
Supply is improving. Capacity is growing. Yet transacting PCR at scale remains unnecessarily difficult.
The reason is not only material availability. It is verification.
This is not a theoretical concern. In building Ecolar Global, a PCR sourcing business operating across India and Canada, the documentation gap was the first operational reality we encountered — not supply shortage, but verification uncertainty. Buyers want to transact. The material exists. What breaks down is the ability to confirm, with confidence, what sits behind the claim.
Most PCR transactions still operate on fragmented documentation and institutional trust rather than auditable traceability. Buyers are frequently asked to make procurement decisions based on declarations they cannot independently validate.
A typical transaction includes some combination of a specification sheet, recycled content declaration, test report and certification reference. On paper, this appears sufficient. In practice, it often is not.
The paperwork exists. It simply cannot be verified.
The most consequential gap is chain of custody. A buyer may receive confirmation that a supplier is certified under a recognised standard. But certification at the company level does not necessarily provide transaction-level visibility into the origin, movement or allocation of recycled feedstock associated with a specific shipment. Documentation exists, but cross-verification is limited. The buyer can confirm the presence of paperwork – not the integrity of the underlying material flow.
Compounding this is inconsistency across intermediaries. PCR procurement rarely happens directly from a recycler to an end buyer. Material often passes through aggregators, compounders, traders, distributors and converters before reaching its final application. At each stage, documentation formats change, data becomes less standardised, and traceability weakens. Two suppliers may both claim “30% PCR” while providing entirely different levels of substantiation behind that number.
There is also the question of grade reliability. For many buyers, the operational risk is not only whether the recycled content claim is accurate, but whether the material will perform consistently across production runs. Variability in melt flow, contamination, odor, color or mechanical properties creates downstream manufacturing risk. Yet procurement teams are often evaluating suppliers with incomplete visibility into feedstock history or process consistency.
This creates a structural problem: Buyers are being measured against recycled content targets while relying on documentation systems that were not designed for verification at procurement scale.
In most mature commodity markets, traceability improves as compliance pressure increases.
Material origin, transaction records, testing standards, and chain-of-custody mechanisms evolve together because buyers require defensible procurement. PCR markets are now entering that phase. The EU’s packaging regulation and extended producer responsibility frameworks are accelerating this transition in that region specifically – creating compliance obligations that assume verification infrastructure which does not yet fully exist.
The challenge is that much of the current recycling ecosystem was built around moving material, not validating information. That distinction matters.
A functioning buyer-side verification environment would not depend primarily on relationship-based trust or static certificates stored in email threads. It would create transaction-level visibility that allows procurement teams to verify what was purchased, from whom, against which upstream documentation, and under what allocation logic. That does not necessarily require new chemistry or new recycling infrastructure. It requires better commercial traceability infrastructure.
At minimum, buyers need three things: chain-of-custody documentation tied to actual transactions rather than generic supplier credentials; clear linkage between material claims and upstream records including feedstock classification and processing history; and consistent grade descriptions that mean the same thing across suppliers and intermediaries.
Without those conditions, PCR procurement remains dependent on fragmented verification practices that do not scale cleanly with corporate recycled content commitments.
The recycling industry has spent years focusing correctly on increasing supply. But as PCR moves deeper into mainstream procurement, the next bottleneck may not be collection or processing capacity alone.
It may be buyer confidence.
Because ultimately, procurement teams are not purchasing sustainability narratives. They are purchasing material risk. And today, much of the market still asks them to do that with limited visibility into what sits behind the claim.






















