Over the past couple of years, plastics have become the public face of the waste
pollution crisis, prompting an unprecedented consumer and regulatory backlash
that shows no sign of stopping.
Industry is responding by switching to other materials without considering their
environmental impact relative to plastics, or whether sufficient local waste
collection systems are in place, as revealed in the report, Plastic
Promises, launched last
month by independent UK think tank Green Alliance.
Although its findings will come as little surprise to those involved in recycled
plastics markets, and are mirrored across Europe, it once again highlights
the gap in consumer understanding of the relative environmental impact of
non-plastic alternatives and the unintended consequences this is having across
recycling industries.
For example, non-plastic food-packaging alternatives — on average — increase
energy use by 2.2 times, carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 2.7 percent, and
weight by 3.6 times, according to a UK parliamentary select committee report
released in September.
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Indeed, the shift in things such as bottled drinks from glass to materials such
as polyethylene terephthalate (PET) that took place across recent decades was in
part driven by its lower carbon usage and
weight.
Coupled with this, food-contact paper and cardboard packaging typically needs to
be treated with a plastic barrier, making it more difficult to recycle and doing
little to counterbalance the problem of microplastic leakage into the
oceans.
For consumers, plastic is a homogenised entity; rather than a series of
different materials with different degrees of sustainability, recyclability or
local collection rates.
PET, for example, has post-consumer collection rates for plastic bottles across
Europe of 63 percent, according to ICIS’ 2018
study
— the latest year for which data is available — but country by country
collection varies from as low as 21 percent in Bulgaria, to as high as 96.2
percent in Germany.
These facts have done little to stem the tide of announcements of switches to
non-plastic packaging from retailers and consumer brands, because the public
perception is that these materials are always more sustainable, leading to
rising pressure to abandon single-use
plastics.
The same consumer pressure is not being felt to the same extent on other
packaging types, despite plastics accounting for less than a quarter of
packaging waste generated in Europe.
Plastics account for 19 percent of packaging waste generated in Europe, compared
with cardboard and paper at 41 percent and glass at a similar 19 percent,
according to Eurostat figures collected in 2016 — the latest year for which
data is available.
The knock-on effect of the public focus on single-use plastics is concentrating
regulatory efforts disproportionately on plastics, because it is providing a
mandate to act which is yet to exist for other packaging types — as conceded by
the EU Commission at the ICIS PET Value Chain conference in March 2019.
This has led to a raft of upcoming regulation specifically targeting the
plastics industry — the latest of which is a plastic tax due to be introduced in
Italy on 1 July, which will tax plastic at €0.45/kg with the exemption of
recycled and bio-based plastics.
The law clearly aims to encourage the use of recycling. In recent years, a
two-tier market has opened up across European recycling markets between
companies that are driven by sustainability targets — typically coming from the
packaging sector, due to the public pressure — willing to pay above virgin
values to secure material, and those purchasing for cost-saving reasons.
Southern Europe has typically seen a higher percentage of cost-based packaging
purchasing of recycling than other regions.
This is on top of EU legislation mandating minimum average recycled
content
of 25 percent in PET bottles by 2025 — on a country-by-country basis — and 30
percent across all beverage bottles by 2030.
Effectively allowing prices of recycled material to trade significantly above
virgin values before cost-saving kicks in through taxation will no doubt
increase buying interest in recycling from companies that had previously shown
little interest, as will minimum average recycled content mandates.
Nevertheless, while these measures are targeted specifically at the plastics
industry and not across environmentally harmful packaging as a whole, the
regulatory framework runs the risk of giving other packaging materials an unfair
competitive advantage.
Rather than helping to solve the problem of packaging waste and encouraging
recycling, this could drive firms to move to alternative materials that are
equally, or even more, damaging to the environment — shifting the problem, rather
than tackling it.
The risk is doubled by the ongoing consumer pressure and lack of detailed
knowledge on the impact of different materials. It’s further compounded by the
inability of waste-collection rates to meet sustainability targets, which ICIS
has shown in detail in previous Insight pieces.
Waste collection in Europe is predominantly controlled by municipalities; under-funding in the wake of the global recession of 2008 has meant that
collection systems have not kept pace with packaging growth or complexity.
Shortages of material for in-demand grades of recycled material — typically
transparent material most attractive to the packaging industry — led natural
recycled polyethylene (R-PE) pellet and natural recycled polypropylene (R-PP)
pellets to trade above virgin grades for the first time in 2019, while the
spread between virgin PET and recycled R-PET food-grade pellets reached a record
high.
Faced with shortages of suitable recycled material, a growing consumer backlash
and a hostile regulatory environment that is not mirrored in non-plastic
packaging, it is no wonder that some companies are deciding to shift away from
plastics.
Further encouraging this shift towards material choices that do little to
improve end-of-life environmental impact would be the worst possible outcome for
the planet. Regulation that encourages recycling or responsible waste disposal
can only be a good thing, but narrowly focused laws that shift the problem to
other sectors could intensify the damage, or at a minimum leave it unchecked.
All the while, the major challenge of increasing collection rates and
infrastructure remains unsolved. If lawmakers were determined to help the
recycling industry, this is where their efforts would be concentrated.
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Senior Editor, Recycling
ICIS
Published Feb 12, 2020 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET