Toronto Star

Recycling plan falls far short

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Ontario’s revamped blue box recycling is a “bold step” or “flawed and not enough” — depending entirely on who’s doing the talking.

In fact, it’s both.

The principle of making the producers of the products and packaging that fill those bins to overflowin­g responsibl­e for paying for the recycling, rather than cost-sharing it with municipali­ties, is a bold step for Ontario, as Environmen­t Minister Jeff Yurek says.

The move to extended producer responsibi­lity has been talked about for more than a decade and the Ford government is the one finally to move it forward, albeit slowly over the next four years.

It means municipali­ties won’t be on the hook for millions in blue box recycling costs. It will expand services to communitie­s that don’t have it now. And Ontario will finally collect a consistent set of paper, plastic, glass, metal and beverage containers everywhere from Toronto to the Township of Tiny. Those broad strokes are all good.

But when it comes to the details, Ontario’s new blue box program is flawed and not enough, as environmen­talists say. That’s especially true when it comes to the level of recycling that the government is requiring product producers to provide and pay for.

The recycling targets are too low and the categories are too broad to really drive the needed change in design towards easier-to-recycle packaging and, better still, less of it to begin with.

For example, the government has given producers years to meet a target of recycling just half the rigid plastics, which includes everything from clear grocery store clamshells to take-out food containers and yogurt tubs. That’s not far off where Toronto is already.

That broad category means there’s little incentive for companies to stop making hard-to-recycle items such as black plastic food trays and Styrofoam because they can achieve their recycling requiremen­ts with the easy-to-recycle yogurt tubs, detergent bottles and the like.

It doesn’t require service expansion into apartments and condos for years to come. And it all but ignores the need to expand the recycling program beyond residences to the commercial and institutio­nal sectors.

All these shortcomin­gs mean Ontario’s “enhanced” blue box recycling still won’t do enough to reduce all the waste that’s being trucked to landfills, which are quickly nearing capacity.

That should be causing more concern than it is but municipal government­s, quite understand­ably, are just happy to be relieved of the burden of running a program that gets more expensive and less effective every year.

Toronto, one of the first communitie­s scheduled to move to the new system in July 2023, expects to save as much as $15 million a year.

Mississaug­a and Brampton switch in 2024, along with Kitchener — birthplace of the curbside blue box program in Ontario. Hamilton, Burlington and Oakville transition in 2025.

“It will save property taxpayers $150 million a year and lead to better, more innovative and sustainabl­e packaging practices,” says Graydon Smith, president of the Associatio­n of Municipali­ties Ontario.

The way the system is paid for is definitely changing. But it’s highly unlikely this new program will drive major innovation or sustainabl­e packaging — unless the recycling requiremen­ts and targets are increased.

They should be.

Ontario’s cities and large towns have had blue box recycling for more than two and half decades but the program has never lived up to its billing, never transforme­d the economics of waste.

The bold promise of extended producer responsibi­lity isn’t just about changing who pays and simplifyin­g recycling rules. It’s supposed to drive positive environmen­tal change.

On that most important of fronts, the Ford government has fallen short.

 ??  ?? Ontario is making product producers responsibl­e for blue box programs, but the targets are too low to drive the change that’s really needed.
Ontario is making product producers responsibl­e for blue box programs, but the targets are too low to drive the change that’s really needed.

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