Increased recycling rates could have economic gains for communities
Reagan Bissonnette, executive director of the Northeast Resource Recovery Associationat a conference. (Courtesy photo)
“If I had to describe the impacts of Covid-19 on the recycling industry, I would say it’s crazy,” says Marc Morgan, Lebanon’s solid waste manager. “For the longest time, there were very seasonal and cyclical trends. … Covid is very strange because it’s really shaking societal norms.”
With more people working from home and students from Dartmouth sent home during the height of Covid-19, the Lebanon Regional Solid Waste Facility, which serves approximately 90,000 people in the Upper Valley, saw a decrease of commercial waste and recycling but an increase in residential trash, especially since many residents were cleaning out their basements and attics.
Amid the Covid waste disposal shakeup, Lebanon logged its best revenue year for recycling in 2020, and by July of this year they’d already reached their recycling revenue estimates.
The Epsom-based Northeast Resource Recovery Association, a membership-based nonprofit that helps towns and cities sell their recyclables, reported recently that their more than 400 members throughout New England, many in New Hampshire, recycled almost 50,000 tons in 2020.
NRRA Executive Director Reagan Bissonnette says that is the equivalent of removing almost 22,000 passenger cars from the road for an entire year.
On
top of environmental impact, increases in recycling rates can have
economic gains for communities. Recycling is an income stream, whereas
towns and cities pay to dispose of solid waste.
“Recycling
markets, recycling pricing is thriving right now, in part because of
the pandemic and in part independent of the pandemic,” Bissonnette
reports.
As habits
changed over the last year, so did recycling markets. For example,
Bissonnette says the markets for cardboard and paper, which make up over
half of the residential recycling stream, shot up at the very beginning
of the pandemic as businesses and schools closed, and therefore stopped
using and supplying those recyclable materials.
“The
cardboard coming in Amazon boxes to our homes became increasingly
valuable, because these companies still wanted to buy that material and
turn it into new products,” Bissonnette says.
Similarly, when bars and restaurants suddenly shut down, beverage suppliers had no
demand for their kegs and instead quickly switched over to aluminum
cans. Then, there was a shortage of cans, not because there wasn’t
enough recyclable aluminum available, but because the companies that
make the cans weren’t able to keep up with demand.
Bissonnette
believes new habits created during the pandemic, like increased
e-commerce and delivery services, won’t go away entirely, and so demand
for items like cardboard boxes will remain.
While NRRA works with communities directly, Bissonnette has advice for individuals.
First,
she suggests harnessing your buying power. “For recycling to actually
work, material you put into your bin has to be acquired by a company
that turns it into a new product and then someone has to buy that
product. So, one of the most important things that individuals can do is
actually purchase products with recycling content,” Bissonnette
explains.
Second, Bissonnette encourages individuals to ask their company or community to purchase recycled materials like recycled paper.
Finally,
she says people need to stop engaging in “wish cycling” — where they
put something in their bin hoping that it will be recyclable, but
ultimately it’s just turned into trash, and that becomes a higher cost
for communities.
Bissonnette
advises, “Recycling is hyperlocal, so it’s very important to contact
your recycling staff and your local transfer station staff to understand
what can and cannot be included in your bin.”
In
August, House Bill 413 was signed into law, a section of which
establishes a statewide solid waste working group and a statewide solid
waste disposal reduction goal.
“Under
this legislation, the Department of Environmental Services will update
the state’s solid waste plan, which will be made publicly available and
will include goals, strategies and actions to reduce solid waste
generation and to increase diversion through methods such as reuse,
recycling and composting, and to achieve the state’s solid waste
disposal reduction goal,” announced the bill’s sponsor, Sen. David
Watters, D-Dover, at the time of signing.
Previously, New Hampshire
had a solid waste disposal reduction goal of 40% diversion by the year
2000. However, due to the way the goal was written, the Department of
Environmental Services was unable to accurately measure progress. HB 413
establishes a new goal to reduce the quantity by weight of solid waste
disposed by 25% by the year 2030 and 45% by the year 2050.
In
Lebanon, there’s a campaign called “Refill Not Landfill” encouraging
the community to stop creating waste, even if it’s recyclable.
“What
I’ve been pushing is actually a concept of not producing waste. We need
to get away from recycling being our savior,” Morgan says.
Morgan
points to bottled water as an example. “We’re OK with drinking bottled
water because I can recycle that bottle, but the production of that
bottle still produces waste,” Morgan explains. “Why not carry a travel
mug or a water bottle?” A cultural shift started in Lebanon before the
pandemic, but Morgan says Covid-19 catapulted it, especially in the
arena of paper waste, as employees working from home relied more heavily
on electronic communication as opposed to printing memos and other
documents. At the Lebanon landfill, they’re going digital too, moving
toward a QR code system for waste disposal as opposed to paper billing.
Morgan says, “It’s that model of not producing it in the first place — even though you could recycle.”
This story is co-published with InDepthNH.org.
“One of the most important things that individuals can do is actually purchase products with recycling content.”