Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    Europe’s recyclers miss most of the critical materials

    Europe’s recyclers miss most of the critical materials

    Chemical recycling roundup: New plant, partnerships

    Polystyrene’s circular future is already taking shape

    IBM logo on building

    What IBM’s quantum foundry means for ITAD

    Certification Scorecard — Week of May 25, 2026

    CommanderAI launches searchable hauler database

    Underwater data centers drive shift in ITAD models

    EU recyclers make case for solvent-based methods

    The electronics recycling industry has a plastics problem

  • 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
      • All Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch / RFPs
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    Europe’s recyclers miss most of the critical materials

    Europe’s recyclers miss most of the critical materials

    Chemical recycling roundup: New plant, partnerships

    Polystyrene’s circular future is already taking shape

    IBM logo on building

    What IBM’s quantum foundry means for ITAD

    Certification Scorecard — Week of May 25, 2026

    CommanderAI launches searchable hauler database

    Underwater data centers drive shift in ITAD models

    EU recyclers make case for solvent-based methods

    The electronics recycling industry has a plastics problem

  • 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
      • All Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch / RFPs
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home Plastics

Experts discuss trade-offs of recycled-content mandates

byJared Paben
January 12, 2022
in Plastics
A recent webinar brought together experts to cover the benefits and complications of recycled-content mandates.| Monticello/Shutterstock

Recycled-content laws are a tool for driving post-consumer resin demand. But what if producers are given too many outs, feedstock is in short supply, or the mandates actually result in greater environmental harm?

Those were concerns raised by three recycling industry experts during a Jan. 6 webinar focused on recycled-content mandates, which are laws and regulations requiring packaging makers and others to use a minimum amount of recycled material in their products.

Recycled-contents requirements were the central topic of bills signed into law in California and Washington state. Now, New Jersey has passed aggressive minimum-recycled-content legislation. They’ve been proposed at the federal level, as well.

Mark Murray of Californians Against Waste, Steve Alexander of the Association of Plastic Recyclers (APR) and David Allaway of the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality presented during the webinar, which was hosted by the Northeast Recycling Council (NERC), the Northeast Waste Management Officials’ Association (NEWMOA) and the West Coast Climate and Materials Management Forum.

The webinar drew 622 viewers, according to NERC.

Past experience in California

Mark Murray, the executive director of the advocacy group Californians Against Waste (CAW), explained how failed past policies can help inform the new legislative push for recycled-content mandates.

He pointed to the Golden State’s three-decades-old rigid plastic packaging container law, which exempts some key categories, including containers for food, drugs, cosmetics, baby formula and medical devices. The policy gives manufacturers too many options for compliance, he said, and “at this point contributes zero to recycling market development, recycling funding and producer responsibility.”

For example, under the specifics of the policy, instead of incorporating 25% recycled content in containers, manufacturers can reduce the container weight by 10%, concentrate the product by 10%, or show that the container is 10% lighter than comparable competitors’ products.

Mark Murray
Mark Murray

“Mostly folks talk about their source reduction and we’re done with it,” he said.

Adding to the issue, Murray said, is the fact that sufficient funding for enforcement hasn’t been provided.

California’s other recycled-content laws requiring recycled plastic be used in trash bags and recycled glass be used in glass bottles and fiberglass insulation also fail to drive increases in the value of recycled materials, he said. The minimums were set at what was reasonable to achieve, but the levels haven’t moved the marketplace or increased the value of the recycled material, Murray pointed out.

In the case of glass products, state law requires bottles to have at least 35% recycled content and insulation to use at least 30% recycled content. According to the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) 2020 glass report, bottle producers averaged 42.6% and insulation producers averaged 47.7%.

Year after year, the reports show producers are meeting the requirements, Murray said, but the amount of recycled glass being used is less than what’s collected, and the program isn’t driving cullet prices higher. The curbside recycling programs continue to have to pay to send glass from materials recovery facilities to an intermediate processor that will sort and clean up the material, he said.

“Other than the nice-looking reports that we get every year, [the requirements are] not doing anything to enhance the market for recycled glass,” he said.

All that being said, he’s optimistic about the latest recycled-content requirements passed in California. Assembly Bill 793 makes brands solely responsible for achieving 50% post-consumer resin (PCR) in beverage containers by 2030. Producers will pay a penalty of 20 cents for each pound they fall short of the target.

“The idea behind this is more than just creating markets for recycled material,” he said. “It is ultimately making manufacturers partners in ensuring that they have sufficient material to meet this requirement.”

Murray added that increasing public and policymaker support for product bans is putting beverage brands in the hot seat: “My message to the beverage industry is, ‘I think you’re in a recycle-or-die moment.'”

Mandates can drive negative environmental outcomes

David Allaway, senior policy analyst at the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), offered a different take on recycled-content mandates, arguing that they aren’t always the right tool for the job.

They don’t necessarily support local supply of recycled material, he said. For example, if Vermont imposed a recycled-content requirement on glass wine bottles, then it may boost glass recycling efforts on the West Coast, where bottles are made and filled, but not locally.

David Allaway
David Allaway

Another concern is the mandates simply “cannibalize” existing markets using the recycled materials. DEQ studied multiple management pathways for recycled glass cullet: landfilling, bottles, fiberglass, aggregate and pozzolan, which is a fine material used in concrete. The recycling industry has a strong bias toward closed-loop recycling, he noted, or recycling the cullet back into bottles.

But in terms of global warming contribution, grinding glass into a fine powder as using it as pozzolan had, by far, the least impact, according to his presentation. Using cullet in bottles and fiberglass displaces silica, but pozzolan reduces cement production, which produces substantial greenhouse gas emissions, he said. Additionally, no heating is required to melt the cullet when it’s used in pozzolan.

Yet if policymakers mandate recycled-content in glass bottles, it could hamper growth in the nascent pozzolan industry.

“Mandating [post-consumer] content in glass bottles could actually have a perverse outcome,” Allaway said.

The same could be true in plastics, he said. For example, recycling HDPE packaging into packaging or pipes offsets the need for virgin HDPE in both cases. But more costs and environmental impacts are incurred when processing scrap for use in packaging, according to his presentation.

He cited a 2015 Journal of Industrial Ecology study, “Common Misconceptions about Recycling,” that argued the preference for “closed-loop” recycling over “open-loop” recycling should be discarded in favor of choosing whichever end use has the highest virgin resources displacement potential.

Allaway also noted that using PCR doesn’t always mean offsetting an equivalent amount of virgin resin. Because of differences in engineering qualities, some products may require more plastic be used if its PRC rather than virgin plastic. In those cases, the greater materials erodes the environmental benefits of recycled resin usage.

Shifting focus to supply is crucial

Steve Alexander, president and CEO of APR, noted that his group was the first industry association to support recycled-content legislation, back in 2006. Starting this year, however, he sees APR putting greater focus on supply.

“We need to ensure that we’re collecting enough material to meet these mandates,” he said.  (APR owns Resource Recycling, Inc., publisher of Plastics Recycling Update.)

Steve Alexander
Steve Alexander

To enable circularity, the first thing that must happen is a product or container must be designed to be recycled, he said, noting that APR’s Design Guide is the most referenced authority globally for companies looking to develop recyclable products.

Additionally, more material needs to be captured. Alexander cited data showing that, in robust recycling programs, households average 77 pounds of PET annually, but less than one-third of that makes it into the recycling stream. Contributing to that gap is consumer confusion, driven by poor product labeling and inconsistent “accepted recyclables” lists.

“We do a wonderful job – all of us – in confusing the consumer,” he said.

APR has been working with the Federal Trade Commission to help inform its update to the Green Guides, which cover environmental sustainability-related marketing claims on products, including recyclability, and were last updated in 2012. The guides could be updated to eliminate confusion in the marketplace, Alexander said, but APR is concerned they may end up lacking specificity.

In terms of demand, APR launched a PCR Certification program to provide certainty to brand owners that the PCR they’re buying is, in fact, post-consumer material, not post-industrial, he said. APR has also worked hard to support expanded uses for PCR beyond the original products. For example, Waste Management began buying curbside carts made with 10% recycled content, creating a huge market demand for recycled polyethylene.

Crates, slip sheets and pallets are other products that are made of recycled plastic, he noted. One manufacturing facility, alone, created demand for 2.5 million pounds of recycled plastic per year when it transitioned from wooden pallets to plastic ones, he said.
 

Tags: Industry GroupsLegislation & EnforcementResearch
TweetShare
Jared Paben

Jared Paben

Related Posts

Film and flexibles recycling needs collaboration

byBrian Clark Howard
May 29, 2026

Experts from the Film & Flex Recycling Alliance, US Flexible Film Initiative (USFFI), Delterra, The Recycling Partnership and Circular Action...

California extends compostable labeling law

California bills crack down on false recycling, compostable claims

byStefanie Valentic
May 29, 2026

Three bills targeting recycling and compostables labeling have cleared key hurdles as California's session deadline nears.

Chemical recycling roundup: New plant, partnerships

Polystyrene’s circular future is already taking shape

byJustin Riney
May 29, 2026

A new study from the Polystyrene Recycling Alliance (PSRA), conducted with Resource Recycling Systems (RRS), offers new insights into the...

California provides funding to boost thermoform recycling

APR and ANIPAC promote recycling in Mexico

byBrian Clark Howard
May 27, 2026

The two organizations are working to better harmonize the handling of plastics in North America.

New York bill would strengthen device repair rules

New York packaging EPR bill faces June 10 deadline

byStefanie Valentic
May 26, 2026

With the legislature set to adjourn June 10, supporters of New York's packaging EPR bill are making a final push.

What a report on Starbucks cups reveals about recycling

What a report on Starbucks cups reveals about recycling

byAntoinette Smith
May 26, 2026

While anti-plastics group Beyond Plastics cast doubt on Starbucks' recyclability claims and left many questions unanswered, its report also provides...

Load More
Next Post
Industry Announcements

News from e-Stewards, Panasonic and more

More Posts

Recycling industry addresses Beyond Plastics report

Recycling industry addresses Beyond Plastics report

May 26, 2026
What a report on Starbucks cups reveals about recycling

What a report on Starbucks cups reveals about recycling

May 26, 2026
EU recyclers make case for solvent-based methods

The electronics recycling industry has a plastics problem

May 26, 2026
New York bill would strengthen device repair rules

New York packaging EPR bill faces June 10 deadline

May 26, 2026
Federal PACK Act aims to preempt ‘patchwork’ of state laws

House advances Recycling Infrastructure and Accessibility Act

May 21, 2026
Illinois expands battery recycling as lithium-ion fire concerns mount

Illinois expands battery recycling as lithium-ion fire concerns mount

May 27, 2026
Bottle bill backers see opportunity for action

PET collapse exposes gaps in US recycling infrastructure

May 15, 2026
CommanderAI launches searchable hauler database

Underwater data centers drive shift in ITAD models

May 26, 2026
Plastic packaging

Why SB 54 source reduction planning is becoming the industry’s most challenging EPR test

May 19, 2026
EPR rules take shape in Oregon, as first test

Oregon OKs end-market verification from CAA

May 20, 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.