California battle looms over plastics recycling

Plastics recycling and recycled content of containers initiate new legislative conflicts in California. Industry and environmentalists appear polarized, as legislators look for common ground.

Recycling has rushed back to the front burner for many packagers this year as California lawmakers seek requirements to increase the use of recycled plastics.

Background of plastics laws

To meet the requirements of California's current law, SB 235, plastic containers had to reach a 25% recycling rate by 1995. If that rate was not met each year thereafter, manufacturers who use RPCs in sizes from 8 oz up to 1 gal would have to use 25% post-consumer recycled (PCR) content, or source-reduce packages by 10% between 1990 and 1995, or make the container reusable. Oregon had passed a similar law.

Oregon met its recovery rate in 1996, partly because of the state's bottle deposit law. However, California's Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) has gone through much political wrangling over how to "count" the recycling rate. The "rate" was declared to be met for 1995. In 1996, industry was able to gain a food and cosmetics industry exemption from SB 235. But for manufacturers using RPCs, there are more challenges ahead.

California funded its own survey for 1996, which revealed that the 25% recycling rate was not met. Eventually, CIWMB randomly sent out letters to 500 manufacturers using RPCs, asking for compliance data. This May, the board ruled to take action against 99 companies for failing to comply with the law. The 25% recycling rate threshold was also not achieved in 1997, according to the state.

In addition to problems caused by attempting to enforce the law on thousands of manufacturers, the current law also requires companies to prove retroactive compliance to 1996 and 1997, via paperwork. Most manufacturers find this impossible to do. (Packaging World attempted to secure comments from some of the 22 California companies on the list of 500 singled out for enforcement by CIWMB. Of three companies reached, not one was aware of SB 235, and all said it would not apply to them.)

Back to the legislature

In 1998, CAW promoted AB 2555, a broad producer responsibility bill allowing industry to meet various utilization goals for plastics. The bill never got out of committee.

"Industry said that bill was too complex," says Bob Fredenburg, an aide to now State Sen. Wesley Chesbro (D-Santa Rosa), the bill's author. "So we decided to go back to the original law to keep it simple and targeted."

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