Consumer Packaged Goods (CPGs) companies' expectations of a supply of more post-consumer recycled (PCR) content didn鈥檛 materialize in 2023. Consumers are demanding more recycling content in their packaging, and CPGs have targeted 25% of their packaging to be PCR by 2025. Many PCR targets were set close to 2020 or during the pandemic.
So, as we get closer to 2025, is the PCR supply chain ready to meet brands鈥 ambitious sustainability targets?
At this point, most industry analysts are leaning toward 鈥渘o,鈥 but sizable progress has been made by state-led Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) packaging legislation and increased industry stakeholder collaboration. While EPR laws for e-waste and batteries have been on the books for years, there are now six states with EPR packaging laws, and it鈥檚 all happened since the pandemic. EPR packaging laws apply to producers: manufacturers, brand owners or licensees, importers, distributors, and converters.
The states with EPR legislation aren鈥檛 small, including California, Colorado, Oregon and Washington, to name a few. PCR content is rising, and coordinated strategies and investments are brisk among industry, nonprofits, material recycling facilities and financial institutions, like Closed Loop Partners.
EPR legislation is essential for higher mechanical recycling rates and only six states have these laws in place.Image courtesy of Source Intelligence
However, this move away from non-virgin packaging material will take time. Recently, there has been increased investment in mechanical recycling facilities with the hope of greater recycling rates. While chemical recycling is making inroads, EPR legislation is recognized as a critical instrument in increasing recycling rates.
鈥淚nvestment can and should come from the EPR programs being implemented in the four states that have passed laws,鈥 says Alison Keane, president and CEO of the Flexible Packaging Association (FPA) in a recent FOOD ENGINEERING article. 聽The FPA has also challenged 鈥減oorly written EPR legislation鈥 in other states. In a December 2023 letter to its members, FPA said the challenges against other states had to do with its untested approach. The FPA cited that 鈥渇irst-step state assessments and studies should be implemented before full-blown ERP implementation.鈥
Due to many drivers and social media influencers, consumers are hearing more sustainability claims, producing interesting observations. A recent example is the 2023 Hartman Group survey with more than 2,200 respondents. One finding from this survey revealed that 鈥淕en Z and Millennials' perception of higher-quality ingredients and sustainable practices, like B Corp or Fair Trade Practices, translated into better-tasting drinks.鈥
A 2023 EPR study by The Recycling Partnership (TRP), a non-governmental organization, found that 鈥渟even paper and packaging recycling programs showed that EPR policy drove the collection and recycling of target materials to over 75% in British Columbia, Belgium, Spain, South Korea and the Netherlands, with Portugal and Quebec at over 60%. Across all materials, U.S. state programs performed far lower without EPR programs in place.鈥
鈥淟ack of sustainable funding is one of the greatest challenges for U.S. residential recycling systems, so EPR provides a huge opportunity to unlock the environmental and economic benefits of recycling,鈥 says Keefe Harrison, CEO of TRP.
Moreover, TRP is working on expanding polypropylene (PP) recycling for community pick-up programs and material recovery facilities (MRFs). TRP has provided $10.3 million in grants during the last four years to support new and improved PP sortation for 41 MRFs across the U.S. For years, polypropylene had been excluded from single-stream recycling facilities. However, with these grants, recycling rates are increasing.
Of the 41 MRF recipients for the $10.3 million in grants, one-third of the 41 MRF recipients have provided PP recycled data rates: Before the funding grants, facilities collectively captured 1.3 million pounds of PP annually. However, post-funding grants, they have captured 11 million pounds of polypropylene annually鈥攁 ninefold increase.
The Recycling Partnership鈥檚 polypropylene grants are a great example of how increased investment by materials recovery facilities (MRF) is moving the needle on recycling rates.Image courtesy of The Recycling Partnership
TRP isn鈥檛 slowing down, either. The organization provided a PP grant for a new optical sorter at the Lakeshore Recycling Systems鈥 MRF in Chicago, called the Exchange. The Exchange opened in August 2023 and will be able to operate at 25 tons per hour, which could be expanded to 35 tons/hr. in the future, according to reports. The Closed Loop Fund, Macquarie Asset Management, TRP and others invested more than $50 million at this facility. Besides a new optical sorter, Lakeshore鈥檚 equipment at the new facility includes a swing arm feeder drum breaking up single-stream materials, auger screens and six sorters from CP Manufacturing.
Besides PP recycling, The Recycling Partnership launched a free resource in October 2023 called the Recycling Program Solutions Hub. This new tool allows local recycling staff to connect, optimize and expand their recycling programs by providing an interactive U.S. recycling map.
鈥淭he Hub will give them ready-to-use solutions as well as a two-way data exchange with The Recycling Partnership鈥檚 National Recycling Database, thereby improving local access information while also making advancements that will impact the broader recycling system,鈥 says Louise Bruce, managing director of the Center for Sustainable Behavior & Impact at The Recycling Partnership.
The resource hub includes a map that displays local program attributes and processing capabilities, and the ability for a recycling staff to view customized program recommendations based on their actual local program data. In other words, system modeling for local recycling programs to make better decisions.
Lakeshore Recycling Systems鈥 MRF in Chicago, called the Exchange, opened in August 2023 and will be able to operate at 25 tons per hour, which could be expanded to 35 tons per hour in the future, according to reports.Image courtesy of Lakeshore Recycling Systems
Increased PCR Content from Chemical Recycling
While industry collaboration and EPR is making inroads, brands need more EPR legislation and market certainty. In a recent , Charlie Schwarze, senior director of sustainability, at Keurig Dr Pepper said, 鈥渨e haven鈥檛 made decisions on post-2025 goals for packaging at this point.鈥 Some of the company鈥檚 other goals around sustainability are pegged to 2030. But policy momentum will likely drive a future set of packaging goals.
Other CPGs, like PepsiCo, are investing more resources in recycled polyethylene terephthalate (rPET) to help its sustainability goals for 2025. PepsiCo reported working to 鈥渋ncrease rPET across several beverage brands, including offering Pepsi, Mountain Dew and Aquafina products in bottles made from 100% rPET in multiple U.S. geographies in 2023.鈥 PepsiCo estimates that shifting to bottles made from 100% rPET reduces GHG emissions by approximately 30% per bottle and reiterates its goal of completely phasing out bottles made from virgin plastics.
While most brands will probably miss their lofty 2025 PCR packaging targets, chemical recycling facilities could help fill the gaps going forward. Eastman Chemical in Kingsport, Tenn., announced plans to build its first U.S.-based chemical recycling facility in early 2021.
鈥淎 lot of the applications we're targeting with this recycled content鈥攅specially in the PET鈥攁re applications where mechanical recycling is not able to meet the specifications in performance,鈥 said Mark Costa, CEO of Eastman Chemical, in a 2023 earnings call. 鈥淥ur product is identical to virgin material made from fossil fuels and mechanical (recycling) is not. It's got integrity and color issues. So, we are really targeting those applications where mechanical is not a choice.鈥
According to industry reports, the Eastman Chemical recycling plant in Tennessee has preprocessed 25,000 metric tons of scrap polyester in late 2023 and is close to full operation. The company is also building a second chemical recycling plant in France that it expects to be operational by mid-2024.
Strong Consumer Preferences聽
Oddly, sustainability preferences from consumers became more definitive during the pandemic and have kept the pressure on CPGs. The trend hasn鈥檛 stopped. Due to many drivers and social media influencers, consumers are hearing more sustainability claims, producing interesting observations. A recent example is the 2023 Hartman Group survey with more than 2,200 respondents. One finding from this survey revealed that 鈥淕en Z and Millennials' perception of higher-quality ingredients and sustainable practices, like B Corp or Fair Trade Practices, translated into better-tasting drinks.鈥
With these consumer behaviors in place, industry partnerships are strengthening to address this sustainability wave. In 2022, Walmart launched its Circular Connector, a resource on design, recycling, definitions and sustainability trends for brands. The platform allows brand sourcing teams to find sustainable packaging solutions via packaging suppliers as companies submit products and are screened against Walmart鈥檚 sustainable packaging goals. If they align with Walmart's goals, the suppliers鈥 products will be published for public download on .
One company that recently qualified was Amcor. Amcor鈥檚 recycle-ready AmSky and AmPrima packaging solutions became available in October 2023 on Walmart鈥檚 Circular Connector Platform. AmsKy is a recycle-ready blister pack that doesn鈥檛 include aluminum and polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and uses high-density polyethylene (HDPE).
Increased Recycling Rates in EPR States
With industry-led PCR recycling initiatives starting to ramp, hitting these packaging goals in 2025 will take a lot of work. According to Keurig Dr Pepper鈥檚 Schwarze, the company鈥檚 work in 2024 on sustainability targets 鈥渨ill be a marathon sprint.鈥
One trend that shouldn鈥檛 waver is more mechanical recycling facility construction and capital in EPR states. In California, the Caglia family鈥檚 Cedar Avenue Recycling and Transfer Station (CARTS) facility is targeting polypropylene (PP) for increased recycling rates and profitability. With the current ERP legislation in place, the facility recycles more than 70% of its collection volume that is then repurposed into raw material feedstock for new packaging.
CARTS sees PP as the next big trend in recycling and recently invested in three robotic arms to sort out the multiple types of collected material. AMP out of Louisville, Colo., provides robotics to CARTS, which includes a single-arm robot for PP鈥攙ia a TRP grant鈥攁nd a tandem robotic system for picking up HDPE natural, HDPE color, PET and film. The company also has a robot dedicated to its aluminum can line for quality control (QC).
Advanced automation and optical sorting are popular investments being made by MRFs to increase volume.Image courtesy of AMP
PP has historically been difficult to recover due to an array of form factors, but it is now emerging as one of the most significant revenue opportunities for MRFs, due to consumer demand, producer commitments and government policy, according to CARTS.
鈥淢y family鈥檚 been around for so long because we like to stay on top of technology,鈥 says Rich Caglia, owner of Caglia Environmental. Caglia鈥檚 recent equipment investment includes two new disc screens, four optical sorters, an auger screen and an eddy current, which allowed the facility to process between 25 and 35 tons per hour鈥攗p from 10 to 12 tons per hour.
AMP鈥檚 robot and vision systems also include a neural network that can recognize 50 billion objects on an annual basis and more than 4.5 million discrete PP materials daily, according to the robotics supplier. The MRF is now producing cleaner, more valuable PP bales instead of a mixed bale of #3-#7 plastics. 鈥淭he robot is keeping the material out of the landfill, and polypropylene is now a marketable product for us,鈥 says Keith Hester, Caglia Environmental general manager.
Inflection Point for Recycling Rates
2024 could be a monumental year for increased recycling rates in the U.S., with Eastman Chemical ramping up its in 2023 and recent news from Envision Plastics on its EcoPrime capacity expansion. This newly expanded North Carolina plant from Envision will increase the company鈥檚 capacity for 鈥渇it-for-food contact PCR recycled resin by 50% for current and new customers.鈥 Resin types include polyethylene PCR and Polypropylene PCR. Ecoprime uses curbside-collected, recycled HDPE PCR and has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Health Canada approvals. The product can be used for a wide range of food applications, including rigid bottles, caps and closures, and blown film for various industries such as dairy, water, cosmetics and nutraceuticals.
Eastman Chemical鈥檚 new recycling plant will produce rPET feedstock for customers like PepsiCo.Image courtesy of Eastman Chemical
Moreover, many other major petrochemical companies are moving quickly to chemical recycling. In late 2022, BASF and StePac Ltd. announced a chemical recycling agreement, and New Hope Energy and TotalEnergies agreed on a new chemical recycling partnership. New Hope Energy will gather mixed plastic waste feedstock from MRFs and convert it to feedstock. The plant is expected to be online in 2025.
At a Resource Recycling conference in 2022, Paula Luu, a senior project director with Closed Loop Partners, commented on mechanical and chemical recycling. 鈥淢echanical recycling has a smaller environmental footprint, but the diversity of plastics today requires a diversity of solutions,鈥 Luu said. 鈥淢olecular (chemical) recycling is just one slice of that pie and it鈥檚 important for the industry and world to first define what waste-free success looks like.鈥