The Prince George Citizen

Million recyclable bottles ‘lost’ every day in B.C., group says

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VANCOUVER — An environmen­tal organizati­on based in Vancouver says one million recyclable bottles and cans “go missing” every day in British Columbia and it’s calling for higher deposits to discourage consumers from littering or throwing them away.

Chloe Dubois, of the Ocean Legacy Foundation, says her organizati­on analysed data from the Brewers Recycled Container Collection Council and Encorp Pacific, the corporatio­n in charge of container management, to compare bottles and cans sold with the number that are returned.

The foundation says about 387 million beverage containers, including items like plastic drink bottles and beer cans, didn’t make it back into the province’s regulated deposit refund system in 2017.

The group is recommendi­ng the province increase the deposit rate, add containers like milk cartons to the deposit refund system and enforce those targets in a meaningful way, like requiring producers to pay to clean up ocean plastics equal to the amount they fail to recycle.

It says an addition 2.3 million beverage container caps go missing every day and it recommends that producers also be required to collect and report on bottle-cap recycling.

In a statement, the B.C. Ministry of Environmen­t says it is reviewing the report, adding the recommenda­tions are generally in keeping with the province’s goal of reducing the use of plastics and other single-use items.

The ministry says more than one billion containers are recycled under the Encorp program alone each year.

Stewardshi­p plans at both Encorp and the Brewers council’s are due for renewal this year and the ministry says it’s encouragin­g the public to give feedback during consultati­ons over the next few months.

Dubois says she and other members of the foundation regularly volunteer to clean beaches in British Columbia and they’re shocked by the amount of recyclable litter they find.

“We need this to change. We can’t keep going out on the shorelines collecting thousands of bottles and caps.”

Dubois says that although B.C. was the first jurisdicti­on in the world to adopt a regulated beverage container refund system, it’s time for revitaliza­tion.

B.C. has a five-cent minimum deposit return rate. Dubois says other countries and provinces have achieved better recycling and return rates in line with higher deposit rates. Alberta and Saskatchew­an both have a minimum regulated deposit of 10 cents per bottle and saw 86 per cent and 82 per cent of their bottles returned, respective­ly. Encorp’s bottle-return rate in 2017 was 76 per cent.

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