AMERIPEN plots areas of improvement for material recovery

AMERIPEN shares its analysis of the 100 Cities survey data to uncover opportunities to optimize packaging material recovery and the value proposition such opportunities provide.

Pw 53649 Ameri

In a late June webinar, The American Institute for Packaging and the Environment (AMERIPEN) revealed where it sees the greatest opportunities for improvement in packaging material recovery in the U.S., based on an analysis of the data collected from its 100 Cities survey. AMERIPEN launched the survey in Q4-2012 to gather comparable data from the 100 largest cities (by population) in the U.S., on five key categories related to recycling best practices—processing, collection, education, local and state policy, and financial.

Summarizing the results, Jeff Meyers of Coca-Cola Refreshments, who co-leads AMERIPEN’s Recovery Work Group with Elisabeth Comere of Tetra Pak, said: “There is no one silver bullet to drive high diversion rates. Instead, what we see is that when a community adopts the key best practices across all five areas of intervention, their diversion rates also increase.”

As AMERIPEN Recovery Team member Jim Frey of Resource Recycling Systems explained, the next step in the process was to look extensively at how AMERIPEN could use these metrics from the survey to optimize recovery and to determine the underlying business case for recovery. “We took a value-chain approach to this analysis,” he explains. “By looking at the recovery portion of the value chain, we gained an understanding of where the real restructuring and enhancement of recovery needs to take place.”

According to Frey, in the U.S., the “spend” by consumers to collection, disposal, and recycling providers is nearly $30 billion. “Of that, the disposal fraction for packaging is $1.7 billion,” he says. “So there is plenty of spend already underway—by generators, by consumers, and by municipalities in this portion of the system. So the question is, how can that spend be better redeployed to further increase material recovery?”

Annual Outlook Report: Workforce
Hiring remains a major challenge in packaging, with 78% struggling to fill unskilled roles and 84% lacking experienced workers. As automation grows, companies must rethink hiring and training. Download the full report for key insights.
Download Now
Annual Outlook Report: Workforce
Is your palletizing solution leaving money on the floor?
Discover which palletizing technology—robotic, conventional, or hybrid—will maximize your packaging line efficiency while minimizing long-term costs in this comprehensive analysis.
Read More
Is your palletizing solution leaving money on the floor?