Los Angeles Times

Could firm’s collapse trash state ‘Bottle Bill’?

‘Bottom fell out’ after recycling center operator closed its doors

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When California’s largest operator of recycling redemption centers, RePlanet, went out of business last week, the state suddenly lost nearly onefifth of its redemption centers in one day.

“‘Crisis’ is an understate­ment,” said Jamie Court, president of Santa Monica-based advocacy group Consumer Watchdog. “The bottom just fell out with RePlanet, that’s what happened.”

The company, which ran redemption centers across the state, shut its doors Aug. 5, causing ripple effects down to the street level. California­ns often turned to RePlanet to redeem deposit fees placed on beverage containers, a nickel or dime, depending on the size of the container.

“Many people rely on getting that nickel or dime back, and when you can’t get that back it hurts Califor

nians, particular­ly those living on the lower end of the income scale,” said Jenna Abbott, executive director of Protect CRV, a recycling industry trade group.

The collapse of RePlanet has also sparked debate over California’s entire beverage container recycling program, whether it can be revived and whether lawmakers and a state agency, CalRecycle, moved quickly enough in the face of mounting problems.

“There’s no question that CalRecycle’s inaction is responsibl­e for the demise of redemption centers in this state,” Court said. “If they simply paid them more to stay open until we had a longer-term solution, we would not be in this crisis.”

Redemption centers are crucial to implementa­tion of a 1986 state law, informally known as the “California Bottle Bill,” which aims to reduce litter and excessive consumptio­n of natural resources. Under the law, the state pays subsidies to redemption centers, including a processing payment to cover the cost of containers they collect — including glass and plastic containers — that are more expensive to process than the raw material is worth. The payments are calculated using a formula that takes into account national economic data.

But two years ago, China started refusing to accept many kinds of U.S. recyclable­s, contributi­ng to the collapse of recycling markets. The declining price of commoditie­s sent the formula dipping into negative territory, said Lance Klug, a spokesman for CalRecycle.

“That started to decrease processing payments just as the recycling industry started to feel the effect of the global market decline,” he said.

Mark Murray, director of environmen­tal lobbying group California­ns Against Waste, said problems with the container recycling program are very much legislativ­e.

“It is a statutory problem, not a CalRecycle problem,” he said. “CalRecycle does not have the authority to fix this.”

Beverage manufactur­ers pay CalRecycle a processing payment that is intended to help the redemption center compensate for collected containers that don’t have scrap value. “While the law conceptual­ly promises that, there are outdated provisions of the law such that that’s not actually happening,” Murray said.

RePlanet’s demise took many by surprise, despite the chaos roiling recycling markets. The company said in a statement that it would work with creditors after concluding that operating redemption centers was no longer financiall­y sustainabl­e. Representa­tives did not return requests for comment.

Though California’s troubles have been driven by global market forces, the state has felt the pain more acutely than many others, some advocates say.

“There’s a much more responsive system in other states,” Court said. “It’s largely because the best states with the highest redemption rates don’t rely on recycling centers as much as they do retailers.”

Eight of the nine other states that have bottle deposit programs require that beverage retailers, in addition to redemption centers, accept empty containers for recycling, Court said. Some of the most successful states also have higher bottle deposits.

In Oregon, the deposit is 10 cents, and the program is run by a cooperativ­e of beverage distributo­rs.

Oregon reported a beverage container recycling rate of 90% in 2018, higher than California’s 76% the same year.

CalRecycle said it has tried to adjust. The agency engaged in emergency rulemaking each year since 2016 to amend the processing payment calculatio­n in an attempt to help soften the blow. Any additional increase, Klug said, would require a change in statute.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, in his most recent budget, also approved $5 million in temporary assistance for the state’s lowest-volume recyclers. About 416 redemption centers will receive an additional $1,000-per-month subsidy, Klug said.

“Moving forward, I think this is going to be viewed as part of a larger problem that requires a collective response in California,” he said.

 ?? Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? WHEN RePlanet closed Aug. 5, the state instantly lost one-fifth of its redemption centers. The closure has sparked debate about California’s beverage container recycling program and whether it can be revived.
Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times WHEN RePlanet closed Aug. 5, the state instantly lost one-fifth of its redemption centers. The closure has sparked debate about California’s beverage container recycling program and whether it can be revived.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times By Alex Wiggleswor­th ?? TWO YEARS AGO, China started refusing to accept many kinds of U.S. recyclable­s, contributi­ng to the collapse of recycling markets.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times By Alex Wiggleswor­th TWO YEARS AGO, China started refusing to accept many kinds of U.S. recyclable­s, contributi­ng to the collapse of recycling markets.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? RePLANET’s closure rippled down to the street level, as many turned to the firm’s centers to redeem deposit fees on containers.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times RePLANET’s closure rippled down to the street level, as many turned to the firm’s centers to redeem deposit fees on containers.
 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA has felt the recycling pain more than many other states, some say. “There’s a much more responsive system in other states,” an activist says.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA has felt the recycling pain more than many other states, some say. “There’s a much more responsive system in other states,” an activist says.

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