Ralf Benack takes over KraussMaffei’s Extrusion EMEA from January 1st, 2024. As Managing Director, he is responsible for the Extrusion EMEA's business and the development of the Extrusion technology worldwide.
“State of Recycling: Present and Future of Residential Recycling in the U.S.” compares the current state of residential recycling with five requirements that The Partnership has determined are necessary for of a truly efficient system. Data from the report shows where the gaps are greatest, and where policy, investment, and action will have the largest impact. The report is based on multi-year field measurement studies conducted across the U.S. and The Partnership’s National Database; it uses an updated methodology for determining recycling rates that tracks materials throughout the system.
“Every year we trash 79% of recyclables but we don’t need to,” said Keefe Harrison, Chief Executive Officer of The Recycling Partnership. “Fixing recycling is completely doable – it just takes a clear plan and a true sense of urgency. This report outlines that plan. Our data provides an actionable roadmap for policymakers, companies, communities, and the public to ensure that recycling reaches its full potential to reduce waste and protect natural resources.”
Among the key findings of the report:
- Every material type is under-recycled: seven out of ten cardboard boxes, three out of four milk jugs, four out of five steel cans, three out of four tons of mixed paper, and seven out of ten glass, aluminum cans, and PET bottles are lost to trash in homes. Why? Not enough households have recycling services and of those that do, communication about how to recycle is insufficient. Specifically:
- 76% of recyclables are lost to trash in homes, underscoring the importance of providing all households with recycling services and engaging residents with good communication about how to recycle locally.
- 73% of all U.S. households have recycling access. Broken down between single and multifamily homes: 85% of single-family homes have access, but only 37% of multifamily homes have access. This means that nearly 20 million households (63% of all multifamily homes) are effectively excluded from recycling.
- 43% of households participate in recycling. with non-participation due to both lack of recycling access and insufficient communication about how to recycle locally. Of the 73% that have recycling access, 59% use their recycling service. But even those that participate do not recycle everything they could - 57% of recyclable materials are put in recycling containers. The report also notes that lack of public trust in recycling affects participation – if people don’t think their recyclables are being recycled, they are less inclined to participate.
- Five states (Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, and Nebraska) have residential recycling rates below 10%; only four states (California, Connecticut, New York and Oregon,) have residential recycling rates at 30% or above. The report estimates that EPR policies would raise recycling rates above 60% for these states, noting that California, Colorado, Maine, and Oregon are in the process of implementing EPR (which takes 3-5 years following passage of legislation).
- Eleven states (California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Virginia) lose over 1 million tons of recyclables annually, this includes states with relatively high recycling rates. The report shows how data-driven, local investment solutions are key to overhauling the U.S. recycling system.
“Each link of the recycling system is interconnected, so we need to close all the gaps,” said Cody Marshall, The Recycling Partnership’s Chief System Optimization Officer. “But we can make the greatest strides by investing in access to recycling services, and communication, and outreach so that people can recycle from their homes and fully participate.”