PITTSBURGH, Sept. 12, 2012 U.S.
communities and states that have implemented alternatives to
extended producer responsibility (EPR) policies are achieving high
municipal solid waste recycling rates at reasonable costs, while
also addressing a wider spectrum of the waste stream than
narrowly-focused EPR mandates, according to a new study conducted
by consulting firm SAIC for the Grocery Manufacturers Association
(GMA).
Released today, the report shows that mandatory EPR programs
aimed at food, beverage and consumer product packaging would not
deliver against their promise of creating more cost-effective
residential recycling programs and driving packaging redesign.
'The food, beverage and consumer products industry is committed
to environmental
stewardship and reducing its impact on the environment,' said
Meghan Stasz, senior director of sustainability at GMA, from the
Sustainable Packaging Forum in Pittsburgh, Penn., where she
announced the study's findings.
'As part of this commitment, America's
food, beverage and consumer products industry is working to
identify efficient, holistic waste reduction and recycling
solutions that work for consumers and communities, and this
analysis by SAIC tells us that EPR does not meet those
standards.'
The study evaluated whether mandatory EPR policies for packaging
are the preferred approach for meeting the environmental objectives
of the consumer packaged goods (CPG) industry in the United
States.
SAIC conducted a thorough analysis of recycling rates, system
costs, packaging changes, and other data from various European and
Canadian jurisdictions that employ EPR for packaging.
They also studied recycling and waste management data for areas
of the U.S. with high recycling rates, such as Ramsey County,
Minnesota (located in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area), a
non-EPR region where the county and its cities have put many model
municipal recycling policies and practices in place. Key
findings were:
- EPR does not necessarily result in improved overall recycling
rates. At 24 percent, the recycling rate of all municipal solid waste in the U.S. where there is no
packaging EPR exceeds Canada's (18 percent) and the European
Union's (23 percent), where EPR is widely employed.
- EPR does not necessarily prompt changes in packaging design and
selection. Despite a faster-growing GDP, packaging use in the
U.S. declined at a faster rate than in the EU, where EPR is
common.
- EPR does not necessarily make waste and recycling systems more
efficient or otherwise decrease costs. Ramsey County, Minnesota, a
non-EPR jurisdiction, has a lower net cost per ton ($156) than EPR
programs in Manitoba($166) and Ontario($202). In fact, EPR programs
increase government and administrative costs.
- States and municipalities already have at their disposal a
suite of non-EPR policies that are both effective and efficient in
terms of raising recycling rates. Together, they can achieve high
recycling rates, without excess cost or administrative burden that
results from EPR.
'The CPG industry is focused on responsible solutions that
address solid waste across the entire lifecycle - from design to
disposal to recovery - and that account not only for packaging, but
food waste as well,' continued Stasz.
'The most successful recycling and waste recovery programs will
result from comprehensive approaches that leverage industry
innovation and collaborative partnerships between NGO's, government
and industry, not one-size-fits-all mandates.'
Check here for a complete copy of the GMA-SAIC
report