Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) and the American Chemistry Council’s (ACC) Flexible Film Recycling Group (FFRG) disclosed a public-private partnership that will increase opportunities for residents and businesses to recycle flexible film packaging.
Flexible plastic film, which includes consumer and commercial product wraps; bags for groceries, produce and bread; and common items, such as sealable food storage bags and shipping pillows, is one of the fastest growing areas of recycling today.
“Recapturing and recycling more plastic bags and flexible film packaging material will reduce solid waste disposal costs, reduce the contamination of other materials contained in single-stream recycling bins, and create jobs right here in Connecticut,” said DEEP commissioner Robert Klee. “This strategy is also one of many action-oriented steps we can take to meet the goal outlined in our draft Comprehensive Materials Management Strategy of increasing the state’s diversion rate to 60 percent by 2024.”
A major focus of the new partnership will be to increase voluntary participation in the recycling of plastic bags, wraps and other film packaging at supermarkets, grocery stores and other retail locations. Encouraging Connecticut’s retailers to offer this opportunity will reduce the volume of plastic bags and film inappropriately deposited in curbside recycling containers.
Recycled PE film can be used to manufacture products such as durable outdoor lumber for decks and fences, and new packaging materials.
Connecticut follows Wisconsin and North Carolina in becoming the third state partner of WRAP.
Successful WRAP initiatives can be seen in the states of Washington and Wisconsin, which have demonstrated that greater awareness of store drop-off programs helps reduce film contamination in curbside bins and at local materials recovery facilities (MRFs).
In Vancouver, Washington, the WRAP campaign helped to more than double collection of plastic film packaging through return-to-retail recycling programs, according to a new case study conducted with the City of Vancouver’s Environmental Resources Division. The study also found a 75 percent decrease in plastic bag contamination at a local MRF.
Plastic film is one of the fastest growing areas of recycling with collection growing 79 percent since 2005. At least 1.17 billion pounds of postconsumer film was recovered in 2014, and the recycling rate grew to 17 percent.
The FFRG, a collaboration working to double the recycling of post-use polyethylene film by 2020, represents materials suppliers, brand owners, manufacturers, and recyclers. In Connecticut, the partners include municipalities, waste authorities, recycling processors, haulers and retailers.
Published in the August 2016 Edition of American Recycler News