Plastics Recycling

Plastic bag recyclers form Responsible Recycling Alliance

A coalition of plastic film recyclers and reusable bag manufacturers launched the Responsible Recycling Alliance (RRA), a coalition organized to help Californians across the state reduce, reuse, and recycle as a long-term environmental solution to plastic waste.

The RRA’s founding members – EFS Plastics, Merlin Plastics, and PreZero US – oppose AB 2236 and SB 1053, two bills pending in the State Legislature that would eliminate the convenient reusable plastic film grocery bags that millions of Californians use – and reuse – every day. They support instead shifting to the plastics industry responsibility for recycling reusable plastic film grocery bags by integrating them into the Plastic Pollution Prevention and Packaging Producer
Responsibility Program created in 2022 by SB 54.

“AB 2236 and SB 1053 do not result in a more environmentally friendly option. We all share a common goal to protect the environment, and while I am certain that the proponents of these bills have the best of intentions, as written this legislation would roll back environmental gains, make shopping more expensive for low-income Californians, eliminate jobs across California, and make it more difficult for SB 54 to succeed in improving plastic film recycling in the state,” Roxanne Spiekerman, vice president of public affairs for PreZero US, said on behalf of the RRA.

Reusable plastic film grocery bags are made in California, contain at least 40 percent recycled post-consumer content (PCR), are used multiple times, and can be recycled into new bags and other materials. They represent a sustainable and circular local solution.

Spiekerman added: “The proposed ban on reusable plastic film grocery bags would force Californians to choose between two options, both of which carry with them negative environmental challenges. The canvas and sewn poly-woven or non-woven polypropylene bags are not recyclable by any known method in the U.S., contain zero post-consumer content, and are typically imported from overseas. Similarly, paper bags consume more water and energy during production and recycling than reusable plastic film grocery bags, resulting in a bigger carbon footprint, they are not intended to be reused, and consumers will have to pay more.”

RRA strongly advocates for the addition of reusable plastic film grocery bags into SB 54 as the surest path to achieve the right long-term solution for recycling in California. Doing so will:

  • Provide an easy-to-use way for Californians to collect the plastics they encounter every day – from dry cleaning bags to bread wrappers to so many others that are not included in curbside recycling – for eventual deposit in large collection bins providing the necessary volume to support plastic film recycling.
  • Protect middle- and lower-income Californians – who are among the most prevalent users of $.10 plastic bags – from having to pay more at a time when groceries are already stretching family budgets. In fact, 77 percent of purchasers of these bags have annual incomes of less than $150,000, and 52 percent have incomes of less than $80,000.
  • Preserve thousands of jobs. The reusable plastic film grocery bag manufacturing and recycling industry employs thousands of hard-working Americans in California and across the country, and AB 2236 and SB 1053 directly threatens those jobs, not to mention all the related jobs they support, such as local restaurants and other small businesses. California’s reusable plastic film grocery bag manufacturers cannot simply switch to making poly-woven and non-woven bags with stitched handles or paper bags.

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