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Home Plastics

California passes bevy of recycling bills in final days

Marissa HeffernanbyMarissa Heffernan
September 8, 2022
in Plastics
California legislators sent a number of recycling-related bills to the governor at the end of this session. | Leonid Adnronov/Shutterstock

When California’s legislative session ended Aug. 31, a number of recycling-related bills passed just before the deadline. Here’s a roundup of bills currently waiting to be signed into law and that have already been signed. 

Expanding the bottle deposit system – SB 1013

SB 1013 underwent major amendments prior to passing the Senate and Assembly. 

It now adds wine and distilled spirits to the state’s container redemption program and also authorizes market development initiatives and processing infrastructure improvements for recovered glass, as well as creates several grant programs and removes the option for retailers to choose to pay a $100 daily fee instead of accepting returned containers, requiring them to either accept the containers or join a dealer cooperative.

The bill awaits Gov. Gavin Newsom’s signature. 

PCR requirements for thermoforms – AB 2784

Thermoform PET packaging already incorporates relatively high percentages of post-consumer resin (PCR), but the recycled content mostly comes from beverage bottles. AB 2784 requires that PCR to be derived from recycled thermoforms. 

The legislation covers a huge category of food and beverage packaging, and requires thermoforms to average at least 10% PCR starting in 2025. 

The bill includes penalties, reporting requirements, exemptions and provisions for reducing penalties. AB 2784 is still awaiting consideration by Newsom. 

Battery EPR – AB 2440

AB 2440 creates an extended producer responsibility (EPR) program for loose batteries that can be removed by consumers. It awaits the governor’s signature. 

The original bill text included battery-embedded products, but that was removed in favor of covering those products in a separate bill (see SB 1215 details below). 

Producers can either set up collection programs individually or through a stewardship organization, according to the bill text, and will be responsible for fully funding training, collection and disposal. Program operators will also have to achieve a minimum recycling efficiency rate of 60% for rechargeable batteries and 70% for primary batteries by Jan. 1, 2027. 

In the wake of its passage, Call2Recycle CEO Leo Raudys said in a statement that “proper battery recycling is not just a safety imperative, it’s also an environmental and social responsibility.” 

Battery-embedded products – SB 1215

SB 1215 adds battery-embedded products to the state’s existing e-scrap program. As of Jan. 1, 2026, consumers would be charged a point-of-sale fee to cover the end-of-life costs of the devices. The bill awaits the governor’s signature. 

A covered battery-embedded product is one containing a battery “that is not intended to be easily removed from the product by the consumer with no more than commonly used household tools,” the bill’s text states, excluding medical devices, energy storage systems and electronic nicotine delivery systems. The bill is on the governor’s desk. 

Paper and packaging EPR – SB 54

SB 54 was signed into law June 30. It creates a producer responsibility organization (PRO) to run a collection and recycling program, with state oversight, for printed paper and packaging. 

Also known as the Plastic Pollution Prevention and Packaging Producer Responsibility Act, the bill mandates a 25% reduction of single-use plastic packaging and foodservice products by 2032, with nearly half of that reduction coming from the direct elimination of plastic packaging or switching to reuse and refill systems, instead of switching to another single-use material. 

Further, the bill requires that all single-use packaging and foodware, including non-plastic items, be recyclable or compostable by 2032 and mandates a 65% recycling rate for plastics by that same year.

It also calls for a needs assessment, paid for by the PRO but overseen by the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle), and eco-modulated fees designed to incentivize producers to use sustainable, recyclable or reusable materials.

A version of this story appeared in Resource Recycling on September 7.
 

Starlinger

Tags: CaliforniaLegislation & Enforcement
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Marissa Heffernan

Marissa Heffernan

Marissa Heffernan worked at Resource Recycling from January 2022 through June 2025, first as staff reporter and then as associate editor. Marissa Heffernan started working for Resource Recycling in January 2022 after spending several years as a reporter at a daily newspaper in Southwest Washington. After developing a special focus on recycling policy, they were also the editor of the monthly newsletter Policy Now.

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