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- <text id=93TT0051>
- <title>
- Oct 18, 1993: Recycling:Stalled At Curbside
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 18, 1993 What in The World Are We Doing?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 78
- Recycling: Stalled At Curbside
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>More and more people are sorting their garbage, but industry
- often can't handle the volume
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE VAN VOORST/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Sylvester Monroe/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> From the reaction in the environmental community last week,
- one would have thought Bill Clinton was about to outlaw offshore
- oil drilling. In fact, all he wants to change is the way the
- government buys its stationery, all $20 billion of it. The President
- plans this week to order federal agencies to purchase only paper
- with at least 20% of the content made from recycled trash by
- 1994. He wants the recycled content to be 30% by 1998. Allen
- Hershkowitz, recycling chief of the Natural Resources Defense
- Council, hails the move as "the most important decision in recycling
- history."
- </p>
- <p> Why? First, because the White House wants to set the standard--a definition of "made from recycled paper"--that environmentally
- friendly businesses as well as state and local governments can
- follow. More important, that action, and similar decisions across
- the country, should stimulate the market for recycled paper.
- </p>
- <p> Not a moment too soon. In spite of highly visible and rapidly
- spreading collection programs, and the surprising willingness
- of Americans to sort their trash, the national recycling effort
- is deeply troubled. With comprehensive recycling programs in
- 40 states, and the number of communities offering such programs
- jumping from 50 to over 4,000 in the past three years, cities
- and municipalities now collect far more of some items than the
- recycling industry can handle--materials such as high-grade
- white paper, computer paper, green glass and plastics. That
- means that the bottles, milk jugs and catalogs that are diligently
- separated into appropriate bins and carefully taken to the curbside
- often end up all jumbled together in the same landfill.
- </p>
- <p> The problem is simple economics: too much supply (used material)
- and not enough demand (for recycled products). When that happens,
- prices drop. And have they! The average value of a ton of household
- waste fell from $100 in 1988 to $44 in 1992. Glass bottles rise
- in shiny mounds in Seattle; plastic containers fill warehouses
- in Johnsonville, South Carolina.
- </p>
- <p> There are some solutions to the household waste, but not recycling
- ones. Space for cheap landfills, once thought virtually exhausted,
- turns out to be still widely available. Seattle, for example,
- has landfill for 100 years, even without recycling. Modern incinerators,
- though hardly without their critics, offer a tidier alternative
- for waste disposal. The 1980s saw a binge in new incinerator
- construction, and cities across the country, from Long Beach,
- California, to Fairfax, Virginia, now burn some of their trash,
- turning a portion of it into energy in the process.
- </p>
- <p> But Americans don't want to send their garbage into the earth
- or into the air. They want to recycle. Hundreds of well-intentioned
- companies have sprung up in response to this enthusiasm, but
- few have prospered. Jason Stanton, president of Envirothene
- in Chino, California, the largest plastics processor in the
- West, says that after three years of operations, the firm has
- just begun turning a meager profit. "Demand's just not there,"
- says Stanton. United Resource Recovery of Canton, Ohio, went
- belly-up this month because it could not find a profitable market
- for its products. And in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Poly-ana Plastic
- Products is limping along trying to market the pellets made
- from recycled bottles. The company has lost money for 56 straight
- months, according to president Marty Forman. "It's impossible
- to compete with virgin plastics at current prices," sighs Forman.
- </p>
- <p> Even successful companies have had trouble making money from
- recycling. WMX Technologies, Inc., the nation's largest collector
- of curbside recyclables, has invested millions of dollars in
- the process over the past five years, only to see profits just
- beginning to trickle in. The company is sometimes stuck with
- mountains of material that it cannot profitably unload. "Until
- we recycle as a system, we won't ever optimize the process,"
- says Jane Witheridge, WMX Technologies' vice president of recycling.
- "How and what we collect determines how it's sorted and then
- how it can be recycled. Each step is part of a whole."
- </p>
- <p> Some materials are far more easy to recycle than others, and
- aluminum and steel lead the list. About 57 billion aluminum
- cans--close to 70% of all those produced--were recycled
- last year, along with 40% of steel beverage containers. Metal
- products are unique in that the recycled materials are usually
- cheaper than the original versions. According to Jerry Thompson,
- vice president for containers at the American Steel Recycling
- Institute, "Because of the huge cost of mining and transporting
- and processing ores, it's cheaper for our industry to collect,
- process and remelt used cans." Both are heavy, compact and durable
- substances and can be collected and reprocessed much more efficiently
- than other recyclables.
- </p>
- <p> Progress has been made in newsprint as well: 43% of all newspapers
- published in 1992 were recycled. Yet MacMillan Bloedel, a Canadian
- company that is planning to build the largest newsprint-recycling
- facility in the world in West Sacramento, California, has put
- its two-year, $1.5 billion project on hold until overall prices
- for newsprint return to profitable levels.
- </p>
- <p> Used glass presents a particularly sharp challenge to the recycling
- industry. Because clear glass and colored glass don't mix, reprocessing
- often results in a hue that is gray or worse. That's why trash
- collectors ask homeowners to separate the clear bottles from
- the amber and green ones. Of course, that doesn't always happen,
- and bottles tend to break, making the resulting bits of mixed
- glass virtually unrecyclable. The Glass Packaging Institute
- in Washington claims that 33% of glass bottles are recycled,
- though not all into new bottles. Many companies, for example,
- use the combined colored and clear shards to produce an aggregate
- for street paving called glasphalt. And the Anchor Glass Container
- Corp. of Tampa, Florida, uses a new process that coats clear
- glass with a colored plastic to be used instead of colored bottles.
- When the coated glass gets recycled, the acrylic color is easily
- burned off.
- </p>
- <p> Of all the junk that constitutes America's household wastes,
- plastics are the most recycling resistant. The material comes
- in so many varieties, produced from such different polymers,
- that just separating it in the recycling process is cumbersome
- and expensive. Add in the cost of reprocessing, and the price
- of recycled plastic goes even higher. For example, virgin plastic
- is 10% cheaper than recycled resins. Says Lance King, community-outreach
- director for the Californians Against Waste Foundation in Sacramento:
- "Plastics may be 40% of the volume in some communities and a
- third of the cost in a curbside program, but they don't begin
- to pay for themselves." North American Recycling Systems of
- Fort Edward, New York, has simply stopped its plastics operations.
- Tom Tomaszek, former president of the company, lamented, "The
- market simply isn't yet there." Nobody, he continued, "will
- buy the stuff at reasonable prices." As a result, tons and tons
- of reprocessed plastics lie unsold in the New York region alone.
- Little wonder only 2.2% of all the plastics produced end up
- being recycled.
- </p>
- <p> One plus for plastics is an advanced chemical-and-heat recycling
- process that literally returns them to their original material--high-quality oil. Unlike other recycling procedures, which
- merely grind up and melt the plastic, the process developed
- at Conrad Industries Inc., near Seattle, accepts unsorted plastics
- and breaks the polymers into their constituent molecules. The
- result is identical to virgin oil, the building block from which
- new plastics are made. Customers such as Lyondell Petrochemical
- Co. of Houston will reprocess Conrad's product, and Conrad,
- a profitable private company founded in 1955, will soon increase
- its recycling capacity from the current 300 lbs. of plastic
- an hour to more than 2,000 lbs.
- </p>
- <p> Enthusiasm for recycling has also produced some innovative technological
- breakthroughs. Patagonia Inc., a Ventura, California, manufacturer
- of designer sportswear, is marketing sweaters spun from green
- plastic soda bottles. Home builders are using a recycled paper,
- wood and plastic wallboard made by Gridcore Systems International
- that is tougher and more durable than wood or drywall. Pallets
- made of recycled plastic by Custom-Pac Extrusion, Inc., of Chagrin
- Falls, Ohio, are outlasting their wooden counterparts 10 times
- over. "These are exceptional breakthroughs," says Will Ferretti,
- director of the New York State Office of Recycling Market Development.
- "There's a lot more to come."
- </p>
- <p> Another company on the technological leading edge is BFI of
- Houston, which uses sophisticated automation in its plants to
- sort and process paper, glass, plastics and metals. Its technology
- works so well that it has increased its "recycleries'' from
- two to 93 in the past three years, and its recycling business
- is growing at 35% a year.
- </p>
- <p> One sure way to boost demand for whatever is coming: better
- symbols on products showing their recycled content. The National
- Recycling Coalition, based in Washington, has persuaded 25 large
- industrial companies, including Wal-Mart, Coca-Cola, AT&T, McDonald's
- and Johnson & Johnson, to back a "Buy Recycled" movement. The
- Environmental Protection Agency is about to launch a "Buy Wa$te
- Wi$e" campaign, urging consumers and manufacturers to favor
- recycled goods. "The public must get away from the idea that
- merely putting items in containers at the curb is recycling,"
- says David Dougherty, director of the Clean Washington Center
- in Seattle. "It's not recycled until it's used again." That's
- precisely what President Clinton says the government can force
- the market to do.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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