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The Association of Postconsumer Plastic Recyclers The Voice of Plastics Recycling. APR. THE ASSOCIATION OF POST CONSUMER PLASTIC RECYCLERS SERDC Annual Meeting Memphis, TN October 27, 2011. APR. 95% of Postconsumer Plastic Reclamation capacity in North America. APR Programs.
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The Association of Postconsumer Plastic Recyclers The Voice of Plastics Recycling
APR THE ASSOCIATION OF POST CONSUMER PLASTIC RECYCLERS SERDC Annual Meeting Memphis, TN October 27, 2011
APR 95% of Postconsumer Plastic Reclamation capacity in North America
APR Programs • Market Development, • Technical Programs • Rigids Plastic Recycling Program • Education • Communication • Regulatory/Advocacy
Industry Key Issues • Key issues: • Supply • Export Market • Contamination • Degradables and Bio-resins • Resin Identification Code • Labelling
Communications • Communicate to key audiences • Blocking and Tackling • Local Recycling Officials • General Public • Elected Officials • Website/KidsRecycling Zone.com • Webinars • Industry Information Clearinghouse • Plastics Recycling Conference
Key messages • Without APR there is no Plastics Recycling • Plastics are not sustainable w/o recycling
Legislative/Regulatory Activity • California • KT, NY, MA, ME, VT, IA • ASTM/SPI Resin Identification Code • Wal-Mart, Canada, et al
Technical Activities • Design for Recycling Guidelines • PET Critical Guidance Document • HDPE Critical Guidance Document • Model Bale Specifications • Color Measurement Projects
Technical Programs/Issues • Champions For Change • Shrink Sleeves • Bleeding Labels • Labelling • RIC Code • ‘Compatible With’ • Contamination
Rigids Recycling Program Nationwide Bale Audit Bale Specificatons Published Recycled Resins Fit for Use Survey Grocery Store Project
Rigids Recycling Program • Some specific resins collected- PS,PP,HDPE,tubs and lids • Mixed rigid plastic materials collected haphazardly with loosely defined or no specifications • Limited US and Canadian reclamation capacity • Most sold export
2010 Recycling Rate ReportHDPE The total pounds of plastic bottles recycled reached a record high 2,579 million pounds. • The total plastic bottle recycling rate was 28.8%, up from 27.8% in 2010.. • The annual increase in pounds of plastic bottles recycled was 5.0%. • The 20 year compounded annual growth rate for plastic bottle recycling was 9.2%.
2010 Recycling Rate ReportPET • The amount of post consumer PET bottles collected for recycling and sold in the United States in 2010 was 1,557.2 million pounds. • 775.9 - Purchased by U.S. Reclaimers • 719.6 - Purchased by Export Markets • 61.7 - PET bottle component of mixed bales exported • This represents a 113 MMlb increase in the amount of bottles collected, resulting in an increase in the overall PET bottle recycling rate to 29.1%.
2010 Recycling Rate Report HDPE bottles collected rose by 2.5 million pounds to 984.1 million pounds. • The HDPE bottle recycling rate rose to 29.9% in 2010 from 29.2% in 2009 • Exports of United States-collected HDPE bottle material fell to 197 million pounds, 20.0% • Imports of postconsumer HDPE to the United States decreased by 38% to 24.8 million pounds
2010 Recycling Rate Report Polypropylene bottle recycling totaled 35.4 million pounds, an increase of 31% over 2009 • 67% of the total processed domestically as deliberate PP material • As opposed to mixed material flake combined with HDPE
RPET Issues • Bottle growth slowing • Bottle collection growing • Curbside Volumes decreasing • Bale supplies tight • More conversion demand than supply • End use demand remains strong • New Investments Announced
RPET Applications • Carpet • Fiber • Strapping • Garments • Fleece • Packaging • Automotive • Anything virgin Pet can do-including bottle-bottle
RPET Issues • 2/3rds of recycled PET into products other than bottles. • Must get more bottles collected to have high recycled content in bottles and STILL have material for other uses. • 50+% of collected PET leaves country • Need domestic buyers healthy because export markets come and go
R-HDPE • HDPE bottle growth stagnant • HDPE bottle collection growing • More bale demand than supply • More reclamation capacity than supply • More clean flake demand than supply • Market dynamics changing • Need new investments
PCR operations • No clear public policy on PCR use • Mandate on supply, not demand • Most orders come month to month, no long term contracts • Higher costs for those users augmenting with PCR, i.e., not using as primary feedstock
Reclaimer issues • Recycled content • Light weighting / downsizing • Bio resins/Degradables • Labelling • LCA’s to understand/quantify sustainability
What is coming Plastics recycling will rely more on technical innovation to sort, clean, process and convert more polymers from a mixed packaging stream to usable post consumer resins. • Investment for innovation will remain difficult to come by without strong market signals
Future issues • Not many bottles in the 3-7 category (about 3-5%) • Product Stewardship for all packaging, not just bottles. • Collection Infrastructure • Intermediate Processing Infrastructure • Contracts and Public Education
APR • Supply not growing, but markets are • No quick cure-but commitments to purchase give security and help investment • Color Sorted Resin has greatest potential for growth and savings for end markets • Export demand is expected to double every 4 years • Good News is we can all expect to market more post-consumer plastic bottles
Finally • SALEXANDER@CMRGROUP4.COM • 202-316-3046 • PLASTICSRECYCLING.ORG • THANK YOU