Monday, March 1, 2021

Pizza boxes in your recycle bin

 These mixed messages just make matters worse. For years we were told, greasy pizza boxes contaminated other cardboard in the recycle bins... and now they don't? We were told the recyclers in the far east would reject the bales if they saw a pizza box... and now they don't? Is it safe to assume that nothing needs to be cleaned, like glass and cans and bottles? Just because the cardboard makers don't have enough recycled cardboard we now can let previously banned pizza boxes in.  Just wait until DPW asks for more money this year for recycling and trash tipping fees.

From the Patch:

Recently, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) communicated to all municipalities that Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) in the Commonwealth have begun accepting pizza boxes for recycling.

What you say?

In the recent past, pizza boxes were rejected by recycling processors due to their “contamination factor.”

Processors went to great lengths to let people know pizza boxes were unwanted guests in a recycling cart.

According to The American Forest & Paper Association (AF&PA), which cited a study conducted by U.S. based corrugated packaging company WestRock, “the presence of grease and cheese at levels typically found on pizza boxes does not impact cardboard manufacturing in a negative way.”

 Furthermore, pizza boxes are successfully recycled every day at paper mills in the U.S, and that people who are concerned about the grease and grease in the box are now given the green light to recycle those boxes. In a statement from AF&PA President and CEO Heidi Brock
“people should simply remove any leftover pizza and place the box in the recycle bin”.

So what’s really going on here?

Fallout from COVID19 appears to have disrupted the cardboard supply chain, causing a shortage in old cardboard containers (OCC).

OCC is needed as feed stock for new cardboard.

Because so many businesses, especially restaurants, are operating at reduced capacity or closed altogether, cardboard collection has decreased substantially. OCC makes up a substantial percentage of recyclable cardboard in the U.S. and manufactures are desperate to find new sources. Those new sources now include pizza boxes from municipal recycling programs.

We can agree that recycling is the right thing to do for all the obvious reasons. However, COVID19 has created additional recycling costs for cities and towns. Because so many people are setting up shop in their houses, and school-aged children are learning from home, the City
of Framingham has seen a marked increase in its overall refuse and recycling tonnage over the past year.

2 Comments:

At March 4, 2021 at 11:23 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

So ridiculous that we can not even get this straight

 
At March 4, 2021 at 1:53 PM , Blogger jim pillsbury said...

Maybe we don't have to use any water to clean glass, cans or plastics like we were told to do just last year, to make sure we don't contaminate cardboard.
I wonder if other countries that recycle agree, or is it just us? that greasy pizza boxes won't contaminate a bale of cardboard.

 

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