• Home
  • Subscribe!
  • About Us / FAQ
  • Staff
  • Columns
  • Awards
  • Terms of Use
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Contact
  • OB Rag
  • Donate

San Diego Free Press

Grassroots News & Progressive Views

California’s Recycling Crisis: China Doesn’t Want Our Trash Anymore

September 19, 2018 by Frank Gormlie

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • More
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Credit: Pixabay

By Frank Gormlie / OB Rag

It’s a sad fact of our Californian recycling world – China no longer wants our trash.

China used to be California’s — and the world’s — largest overseas market for recyclables, but in January, China began not accepting “contaminated” material it once brought to its shores. For China, now, if the recycled material is one-half of 1% contaminated, it’s too impure for recycling.

CalRecyle – which runs California’s recycling program – stated in a bulletin in August:

“This policy change is already starting to have adverse impacts on California, and is resulting in more material being stockpiled at solid waste facilities and recycling centers or disposed of in landfills.”

An official for Recology, a curbside hauler that does San Francisco Bay Area trash for recycling, stated:

“There’s no market for a lot of stuff in the blue bin. What we can’t recycle we take to a landfill.”

Back in 2017, Recology was getting $100 a ton for newsprint. Now they are averaging about $5 a ton.

Yet, Californians shouldn’t blame China, as the executive director of Californians Against Waste, an advocacy group, stated:

China’s not the bad guy. To the Chinese credit, they’ve decided they don’t want to have Third World [trash] sorting in their country.”

With a growing middle class, China doesn’t want its kids and families sorting through mixed paper and plastic. They no longer want to do our dirty work.

So, we have a recycling crisis in California. There’s no longer a recycling market for a lot of the paper, cardboard, plastic and other junk that Californians leave curbside.

And the crisis is beyond China – as it’s also about a broken state recycling program. As the LA Times reported:

… the program itself needs recycling. It’s not generating enough money, in many cases, to make recycling pay. Scrap value has dropped — especially for plastic. When oil prices tumbled, it became cheaper to make plastic bottles from all-new material than recycled matter.

Nearly 1,000 recycling centers have closed in the last two years, about 40% of the total, leaving consumers in many communities with no local place to leave their bottles and redeem their nickels.

California’s once-proud recycling program “is teetering on the edge,” says state Sen. Steve Glazer (D-Orinda). It was hit hard in 2016 when the state cut back on fees it paid to recyclers. The old fees served as recycling incentives.

The word in Chinese for “crisis” has 2 meanings, “danger” and “opportunity”.

Which means Californians have an opportunity to figure this out … BUT in the meantime, what do we place in our blue recyclers? What is no longer good recyclables?

Here are some rules of thumb:

  • There’s obvious stuff not to put in them, like dirty diapers, broken crockery, old garden hoses, and especially not old batteries.
  • Do not include pizza boxes blotched with cheese and grease;
  • no plastic wrappers for food,
  • no shredded paper,
  • no unclean jelly jars,
  • no broken glass,
  • no unrinsed bottles
  • no newspapers that have lined bird cages;
  • no paper envelopes with plastic address windows,
  • no mixed material such as paper and plastic, or cardboard and tape.( It doesn’t pay to tear the stuff apart. Off to the landfill.)

State Sen. Bob Wieckowski (D-Fremont) may have one solution. He has a bill that would require all beverage containers sold in California to contain a minimum amount of recycled material, established by CalRecycle. This bill is going after plastic containers, in order to create a larger market for plastic recycling in California. It also would help reduce greenhouse gases, the senator says, because “we wouldn’t be burning more oil to make plastic bottles.”

But we’ve got to figure this recycling-trash thing out. Now’s our chance.

 

  • Bio
  • Latest Posts
Frank Gormlie

Frank Gormlie

A lawyer and grassroots activist, I was finally convinced by Patty Jones to start the OB Rag, a blog of citizen journalists, after she got tired of listening to my rants about the news. Way back during the Dinosaurs in 1970, I founded the original Ocean Beach People’s Rag - OB’s famous underground newspaper -, and then later during the early Eighties, published The Whole Damn Pie Shop, a progressive alternative to the Reader.
Frank Gormlie

Latest posts by Frank Gormlie (see all)

  • Mayor’s Office Confirms Sale of Liberty Station Leases by McMillin – But Questions Remain - December 5, 2018
  • Why Would Anyone Want to Flee Beautiful Honduras? - November 29, 2018
  • A Progressive Looks at the San Diego Mid-Terms – OB Rag Interview With Doug Porter - November 21, 2018

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Filed Under: Environment

« Kavanaugh’s Accuser Is Credible. Will It Matter? | Video Worth Watching
A Layman’s Guide to the Destroy Public Education Movement »
San Diego Free Press Has Suspended Publication as of Dec. 14, 2018

Let it be known that Frank Gormlie, Patty Jones, Doug Porter, Annie Lane, Brent Beltrán, Anna Daniels, and Rich Kacmar did something necessary and beautiful together for 6 1/2 years. Together, we advanced the cause of journalism by advancing the cause of justice. It has been a helluva ride. "Sometimes a great notion..." (Click here for more details)

#ResistanceSD logo; NASA photo from space of US at night

Click for the #ResistanceSD archives

Make a Non-Tax-Deductible Donation

donate-button

A Twitter List by SDFreePressorg

KNSJ 89.1 FM
Community independent radio of the people, by the people, for the people

"Play" buttonClick here to listen to KNSJ live online

At the OB Rag: OB Rag

More Photos from San Diego’s No Kings — A Week Later

Trump Moving Federal Agencies — Like the Forest Service — Out of D.C. to Locales that Voted for Him

OB Post Office for Sale!

Trump Signs Executive Order to Have Feds Control the Only ‘Official’ Voter Lists

Fears of Aging in the Midst of Madness

  • Sitemap
  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Terms of Use

©2010-2017 SanDiegoFreePress.org

Code is Poetry

%d