Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumStudy - Amazon Claims Its Plastic Packaging Can Be Recycled; It's Usually Buried, Burned Or Shipped Elsewhere
Feeling guilty about all those blue-and-white plastic Amazon bags piling up around the house? Fear not they can be recycled! At least, thats what the packaging says. For years now, Amazons plastic bags, bubble-lined mailers, and air pillows have featured the ubiquitous chasing arrows recycling symbol along with the words store drop-off. The idea is simple: Since most curbside recycling programs dont accept this type of plastic its too expensive to process and can clog machines consumers can instead leave it at retail stores across the country. From there, this plastic, known as film, will go to a specialized facility and be turned into new products.
The problem, however, is that the system doesnt seem to be working. An investigation published Tuesday by the nonprofits Environment America and U.S. Public Interest Research Group, or U.S. PIRG, suggests that only a small fraction of Amazons plastic packaging makes it to a material recovery facility, the term for operations that sort glass, metal, plastic, and other items for recycling. The packaging is much more likely to end up in a landfill, incinerator, export terminal, or in the hands of a company that downcycles plastic film into things like benches.
EDIT
To find out what happens to Amazons plastic packaging, U.S. PIRG and Environment America attached small tracking devices mostly Apple AirTags to 93 bundles of Amazon plastic packaging marked for store drop-off and deposited them at retailers in 10 states. These stores, which were listed in an online directory, included mostly supermarkets like Safeway, Sprouts, Publix, Fred Meyer, QFC, and Whole Foods, although some bundles were placed at outlets like Kohls or Home Depot. The report authors were able to determine the fate of about half the bundles, since, as expected, many of the trackers likely died before reaching a final destination. Of those that survived, 13 went to a landfill, two went to a waste incinerator, and three went to the Port of Los Angeles, suggesting that the bundles were destined for processing or disposal overseas.
Only four trackers eventually made their way to a material recovery facility that sorts plastics for recycling. U.S. PIRG and Environment America said they were able to contact three of those facilities: Two specifically said they do not accept Amazon packaging, and the third said it accepts only paper and cardboard. Two dozen trackers ended up in the hands of Trex, a company that makes benches and decking out of discarded plastic. But U.S. PIRG and Environment America question whether Trex is using Amazon packaging in its products; the contents of store drop-off bins are often littered with food and beverages, likely rendering this plastic too contaminated to use in manufacturing.
EDIT
https://grist.org/accountability/amazon-says-its-plastic-packaging-can-be-recycled-an-investigation-finds-it-usually-isnt/
intheflow
(28,899 posts)Just because something can be recycled doesn't mean it will be, because municipalities don't have the tempermental and expensive machines needed to recycle it.