Packagers gain price cuts for recycled materials

Buyers of recycled plastics are seeing easing of prices, except for HDPE. Recycled paper prices have precipitously dropped as European economies stagnate.

Packagers may fare a little better this year than last when they go to specify recycled materials, but the previous "roller coaster" of prices has experts reluctant to predict the future.

The world markets for all used commodities are off because of uncertain economic growth. Demand for finished goods is down. This has meant lower prices for all commodities, including used aluminum, certain plastics, and paper.

Prices for recycled plastics have followed a little below virgin prices, with polyethylene terephthalate (PET) on the way down because of increased virgin capacity, and high-density polyethylene (HDPE) up 20% over the beginning of this year.

Recycled paper prices plummeted from a high of $232/ton for old corrugated containers (OCC) in April 1995 to zero last fall in some Northeastern locations. Recovery of prices did not occur in the first quarter, as the paper industry had predicted. With poor demand for product, prices for linerboard moderated this year, down 30% from its high water mark in April 1995.

An annual survey from the American Plastics Council estimated that 18% of all plastic containers were recovered for recycling in 1995, up 5%. A change in the way the APC counts recycled material-- counting baled bottles coming in the door rather than pellets out to market--helped increase the rate this time. APC estimates that more than 500 million lb of plastics are being recycled in about 7귔 curbside programs (the number of curbside programs collecting plastics is in dispute).

Recyclers are a bit more conservative in their estimate, placing the figure somewhat below 500 million lb.

PET factors include Chinese buyers, deposits

The recycling rate for PET bottles went down slightly: the overall rate from APC was 30% this time. This was because demand for PET soared 12%, because of new bottle- making technologies, increased popularity of the resin, and use of PET in the smaller 16- to 20-oz soft drink bottles. The smaller bottles tend to be consumed more away from curbside bins.

The price of recycled PET soared to about 43¢/lb for baled bottles in April 1995, as Far Eastern plants outbid most U.S. buyers. The rate went back down to traditional levels by fall, and it keeps falling now, as more virgin PET capacity comes on line around the world.

With new capacity in production, the price of virgin went from the 60¢/lb range to 57¢ to 59¢/lb by July 1996, and more off-spec resin became available. By mid-July 1996, the price of baled bottles had fallen to about 81/4¢/lb from a high of about 40¢/lb, and appeared headed for 7¢/lb.

Marketers of baled bottles hit bottom in July 1995, when Chinese buyers suddenly stopped buying. That sent ripples throughout the world market. Since prices collapsed, plastics quickly began to pile up in German warehouses, where plastics recycling is highly subsidized by the "Green Dot" system.

Stories--pushed by the international environmental group, Greenpeace--appeared in the Wall Street Journal, accusing China of being a dumping ground for trash. Many of the Chinese buyers were victims of fraud, observers now admit, with trash buried inside bales of plastics.

"A broker can't see every bale going out the dock," commented one major West Coast broker of PET.

The reports created a political incident. It gave "liberal" environment officials an excuse to crack down on Communist-owned enterprises which use the recycled plastics for fiber applications, by enforcing import licensing laws. In the fall, China passed a major solid waste law, effective April 1996. The law bans import of any material not on a list--plastics are not on the list--although paper is. However, brokers say plastics are getting in illegally, as markets are holding as of July 1996.

The market for PET soda bottles is heavily subsidized in California, under the state's forced redemption law. The Plastics Recycling Corp., Sonoma, CA, must guarantee a price about 38.5¢/lb for the bottles from buy-back centers even though they can only sell bales for 7 to 8¢/lb. In the past, most of the 6 million lb of plastic was exported to the Far East or to the East Coast.

Today there are two California recyclers that could handle all but 1.7 million lb of the material. There is no lack of demand for cleaned pellets at market prices (below virgin). However, it is unclear how contracts will work out, sources said.

Nationwide, however, the market for PET bales was poor in July, with some material staying in warehouses from curbside programs because manufacturers preferred to buy the off-spec virgin.

Good demand for HDPE

The markets for HDPE have somewhat different factors, since they go into different products that are not affected by deposit laws in 10 states. Many of the nation's top consumer product makers are using the post-consumer material in HDPE bottles today.

One recycler estimates the volumes (which include some PET) are as follows:

* Procter & Gamble: 50 million lb

* Clorox: 23 million lb

* Colgate: 10 million lb

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