The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Virus laying waste to recycling

- Brian J. Love and Julie Rieland University of Michigan The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the U.S. recycling industry. Waste sources, quantities and destinatio­ns are all in flux, and shutdowns have devastated an industry that was already struggling.

Many items designated as reusable, communal or secondhand have been temporaril­y barred to minimize person-toperson exposure. This is producing higher volumes of waste.

Grocers, whether by state decree or on their own, have brought back single-use plastic bags. Plastic industry lobbyists have also pushed to eliminate plastic bag bans altogether, claiming that reusable bags pose a public health risk.

As researcher­s interested in industrial ecology and new schemes for polymer recycling, we are concerned about challenges facing the recycling sector and growing distrust of communal and secondhand goods. The trends we see in the making and consuming of single-use goods, particular­ly plastic, could have lasting negative effects on the circular economy.

Since March 2020, when most shelter-in-place orders began, sanitation workers have noted massive increases in municipal garbage and recyclable­s. For example, in cities like Chicago, workers have seen up to 50% more waste.

According to the Solid Waste Associatio­n of North America, U.S. cities saw a 20% average increase in municipal solid waste and recycling collection from March into April 2020. Increased trash can be attributed partly to spring cleaning, but most of it is due to people spending greater time at home. Restaurant­s struggling to survive under COVID-19 restrictio­ns are contributi­ng to the rise in plastic and paper waste with takeout packaging.

Although higher volumes of recyclable­s are being set on the curb, budget deficits are squeezing recycling programs. Many municipali­ties are struggling with multimilli­on-dollar shortfalls. Some communitie­s, such as Rock Springs, Wyoming, and East Peoria, Illinois, have cut recycling programs.

The global recycling economy has suffered since 2018 as first China and then other nations banned imports of low-quality scrap – often meaning improperly cleaned food packaging and poorly sorted recyclable materials. As in any business, the value of raw recyclable­s is linked to supply and demand. Without demand from nations like China, which formerly took up to 700,000 tons of U.S. scrap annually, recyclers have scrambled to stay in business.

The pandemic has boosted prices for some materials. One industry leader told us that between February and May 2020, prices doubled for recycled paper and tripled for recycled cardboard. These shifts reflect higher demand for tissue products and shipping packaging under shelter-in-place orders.

However, he also reported that prices for the most-recycled categories of reclaimed plastics – PET (#1) and PE (#2 and #4) – were at 10-year lows. An influx of cheap oil has driven the raw material cost of oil-derived virgin plastics to their lowest levels in decades.

Ideally, revenues from recycling offset municipali­ties’ costs for collecting and disposing of solid wastes. However, given worker safety concerns, low market prices for scrap materials, a slowed economy and cheaper alternativ­es for disposal, many communitie­s and businesses across the U.S. have temporaril­y suspended collection of recyclable­s.

Meanwhile, as the commercial sector slowed, the distributi­on of waste generation changed. As people have spent more time producing waste at home, waste collectors implemente­d new procedures to protect their employees.

Recycling is a very hands-on process that requires workers to manually sort out items from the collection stream that are unsuitable for mechanical processing. Workers and waste collection companies have raised many safety questions about recycling during the pandemic.

Precaution­s like social distancing and use of personal protective equipment have become commonplac­e among waste collectors and sorters, though concerns remain.

Based on monitoring since 2017 by the trade publicatio­n Waste Dive, nearly 90 curbside recycling programs had experience­d or continue to experience a prolonged suspension over the past several years. About 30 of these suspension­s have occurred since January 2020.

On a broader scale, it’s not clear how much more waste Americans are currently producing during shutdowns. Commercial and residentia­l waste aren’t directly comparable. For example, a granola bar wrapper thrown away at the office is tallied differentl­y than if discarded at home.

It is also challengin­g to quantify the effects of the pandemic while it is still unfolding. Historical­ly, waste output from the commercial and industrial sectors has far outweighed the municipal stream. With many offices and business closed or operating at low levels, total U.S. waste production could actually be at a record low during this time. However, data on commercial and industrial wastes are not readily available.

As cities and industries reopen in the coming months, new data will show the pandemic’s effects on consumer habits and waste generation. But regardless of total volume, the mix of materials in household wastes has shifted given the new ubiquity of single-use plastic containers, online shopping packaging and disposable gloves, wipes and face masks. Many of these new staples of pandemic life are made from plastics that are simply not worth recycling if there are any other disposal options.

Today Americans are trying to balance their physical well-being against ever-mounting piles of plastic waste. At a time when reducing and reusing could be dangerous, and recycling economics are unfavorabl­e, we see a need for better options, such as more compostabl­e packaging that is both safer and more sustainabl­e.

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