Critics
say Rhode Island’s new limited Styrofoam recycling program could hinder future
efforts to ban the material.
By KEVIN PROFT/ecoRI News staff
This new program is the result of a partnership between
the Rhode Island Resource Recovery Corporation (RIRRC), the state’s waste
management agency, and the Dart Container Corp., a large foodservice
packaging manufacturer. Dart Container manages or partners on 85 Styrofoam
drop-off locations nationwide.
RIRRC stores foam delivered to its drop-off location in large
containers, according to Christine Cassidy, recycling manager for Dart
Container. About once a month, Dart Container collects the foam from RIRRC —
using a delivery truck already in the area — and backhauls the material to its
manufacturing and recycling facility in Leola, Pa. The foam is turned into
pellets, then sold to manufacturers of non-food-grade items such as picture
frames or crown molding.
More foam could be collected if the recycling program were
marketed to businesses that generate high volumes of foam waste, Kite said.
That said, RIRRC is hesitant to expand the program because there is a limit to
how much foam Dart Container can haul. If too much foam is collected, the
program could be overwhelmed, she said.
Despite its popularity, the new program only diverts a small
fraction of Rhode Island’s Styrofoam from the landfill because it relies on
people driving this waste to a solitary drop-off location.
“Ideally, we would have more drop-off locations,” said Kite,
noting that such an expansion would require a local foam recycler or hauler.
For now, the program’s expansion is dependent on Dart Container’s capacity to
backhaul foam from Rhode Island to Pennsylvania, she said.
Recycling
foam
Styrofoam is about 95 percent air, which makes it inexpensive to produce and ship, and attractive to companies that need cheap food packaging or lightweight packaging to protect products during shipping.
This fact also makes foam unattractive to recycle. Foam can be
recycled, but collecting it and transporting it to a recycling facility is
generally not economical for haulers — after all, they’re transporting mostly
air. According to Dart Container’s website, the recyclable material in a full
48-foot-long trailer of loose foam only weighs about a thousand pounds.
Foam densifiers, which compact foam significantly, can help with
the economics of transporting foam to recycling facilities, but Rhode Island’s
new recycling program doesn’t utilize such a machine.
Financially, Dart Container generally breaks even on backhauling
Rhode Island foam to its facility in Pennsylvania, according to Cassidy. She
said the company’s interest in the program is more altruistic. “(As) one of the
leading manufacturers of foam food material, we want to be socially
responsible,” she said.
Brookline
ban
Clint Richmond, volunteer co-chair of the Green Caucus of Brookline Town Meeting Members, isn’t convinced of Dart Container’s altruism. Richmond was involved in the 2012 effort that succeeded in banning rigid and foam polystyrene foodservice products in Brookline, Mass.
He said the effort to ban
polystyrene in Brookline arose after the Department of Health and Human
Services determined that styreneis “reasonably anticipated to be a
human carcinogen,” and can leach into food and beverages from polystyrene
containers.
“It is a harmful material, and it is being made into a product to
store food,” Richmond said.
Opponents of polystyrene bans claim this accusation, while true,
is misleading. Polystyrene food containers haven’t been directly linked to
cancer or other human health complications, they say. In 2012, Alan Balsam,
Brookline’s director of public health, agreed with opponents of the ban on this
issue while maintaining an otherwise neutral position.
Richmond also cited environmental concerns related to polystyrene
in favor of the ban, including its negative impact on ecosystems when it is
inevitably littered, and the space it occupies in landfills.
Representatives from Dart Container and Dunkin’ Donuts were among
those who lobbied against Brookline’s ban. They argued that disposable
polystyrene products would be replaced by other disposable products, resulting
in little impact on overall waste.
Dart Container also refuted health concerns
and claimed that polystyrene is more environmentally friendly than its
alternatives, because it requires less resources and energy to produce, and it
doesn’t biodegrade and release methane in landfills the way paper and
compostable alternatives do.
Richmond, however, claimed Dart Container is more concerned with
its bottom line, than it is with the waste stream, energy use or greenhouse-gas
emissions.
“Dart is not supportive of polystyrene bans because they want to
protect that portion of their business,” he said.
Richmond believes Dart Container will use Rhode Island’s limited
foam recycling program as ammunition against a future attempt to ban the
material in the state.
Dart Container and Dunkin’ Donuts each used the recyclability of
polystyrene as a talking point in their 2012 testimonies against Brookline’s
Styrofoam ban. Christine Riley Miller, senior director of corporate social
responsibility at Dunkin’ Donuts, cited a soon-to-be-launched pilot in-store
foam-cup recycling program.
Ray Ehrlich, regional manager of government affairs and the
environment at Dart Container, testified that foam is 100 percent recyclable.
“Is it recycled? Yes it is — on a limited basis,” he said.
Earlier this year, Dart Container filed a lawsuit against New York
City, after foam polystyrene was banned by the administration of Mayor Bill de
Blasio. The administration said foam is too difficult to recycle and therefore
favored a ban. Dart Container’s lawsuit is based on the premise that recycling
is the answer to foam waste, not an outright ban.
“Usually, when bans come up, the main issue is that foam cannot be
recycled, but we have been recycling it for 25 years,” said Cassidy, during a
recent interview with ecoRI News.
With the right local infrastructure, recycling foam can be
profitable, and demand for recycled foam is high among manufacturers, she said.
Cassidy also argued that bans primarily focus on food-grade foam,
such as foam cups, but leave the problem of foam from items such as electronics
packaging unaddressed. A recycling program, she said, addresses both types.
Ban the
bag
Advocates of reducing plastic waste in Rhode Island experienced similar arguments during recent campaigns to ban plastic shopping bags statewide. Since 2013, a bill to “ban the bag” has been introduced. Each year, opponents have used the state’s existing recycling program as a talking point to prevent the bill from passing.
In 2013, RIRRC opposed the ban, arguing that it would undermine
the statewide storefront bag recycling program. The next year, RIRRC switched
its position to neutral, but Kite offered oral testimony in support of the
recycling program during a Senate committee hearing.
During that same hearing, Sen. Stephen Archambault, D-Smithfield,
stressed improving the state’s recycling efforts over a ban. “Is there an
intermediate step on recycling, short of banning plastic bags and wiping out a
whole industry that (can be implemented)?” he asked.
Kite continued to favor recycling plastic bags instead of banning
them, when interviewed for this story. She maintained that the recycling
program is popular, based on her personal observations of storefront bag
recycling bins, and the decrease in plastic bags blowing around the Central
Landfill.
“The problem is not what it was ten years ago,” she said.
“Recycling capability is improved, reusable bags have become established,
people are more aware, so they don't take 30 bags per shopping trip, and they
reuse them.”
Meanwhile, enforcement of a ban — likely overseen by an already
strapped-for-cash Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management — would
be ineffective, Kite said.
According to supporters of a plastic shopping bag ban, most
plastic bags don’t get recycled. In fact, according to the Environmental
Protection Agency, only 12 percent of plastic bags and plastic wrap are
recycled. Rhode Island doesn’t track its bag recycling rate, according to Kite.
Channing Jones, former campaign manager for Environment Rhode
Island, led the “ban the bag” effort in 2013 and 2014. In a recent interview,
he said that while RIRRC and lobbyists from the plastic-bag industry used the
recyclability of plastic bags as reasons to oppose a ban, it wasn’t a central
issue. Ban opponents were more concerned with limiting consumer choice and
increasing costs for local businesses, he said.
“I wouldn’t say the recycling program was a major obstacle or a
main opposition weapon, though it was a small obstacle,” he said. “Our message
in the bag-ban effort didn't focus on whether plastic bags are recyclable or
not, but on the fact that so many end up as debris, especially in aquatic
environments. The debris problem is due to plastic bags being littered rather
than disposed of, and it's irrelevant whether they're recyclable or not.”
RIRRC hasn’t considered what its position would be regarding a
Styrofoam ban, according to Kite. Some factors that would go into such a
decision would include enforcement, recyclability, the type of ban — food
packaging foam or something more comprehensive — and whether it would be banned
from the landfill or restrict merchants from using foam products at their
stores, she said.
Currently, the regional infrastructure for recycling foam isn’t as
robust as it was for recycling plastic bags when the bag ban was first
introduced, Kite said.