Today is America Recycles Day. Here’s the current state of Philadelphia recycling, told by common recycling questions.
Single-stream recycling was picked up from the curb and sold to different buyers, including overseas. For example, Philadelphia’s paper from the bin was being sold to Vietnam or India.
The single-stream recycling market was disrupted in 2018 when China restricted what goods it would accept. As a result (combined with a lack of recycling contracts), Philadelphia burned half of its recycling.
However, the City of Philadelphia signed a new recycling contract in May 2019, ending (most of) the incineration of recyclables.
Yes, Philadelphia is recycling. However, recycling is a commodities market, which means the specifics that are recycled often depend on what can be sold for a profit.
So even if you put something in your recycling bin – and it’s “supposed” to be recycled – it may depend on if there’s a buyer. Or, recycling contamination from another resident could ruin your efforts at the MRF.
Throughout the pandemic, city residents have reported that their recycling was combined with trash. According to our investigation last year, insiders blamed a mismanaged Streets Department for the lack of recycling, although the city has blamed the weather and worker shortages.
We get this question a lot, and it’s complicated.
It’s silly to obsess over every household item to make sure it ends up being recycled. After all, single-stream recycling is supposed to make it easier to deal with your waste.
Instead, it would be a better use of your time (and energy) to reduce your waste in the first place, to lessen your overall impact.
One great alternative? Start composting, which is estimated to reduce your trash by 25-50%.
Mayor Jim Kenney created the Zero Waste and Litter Cabinet in 2016 to diver 90% of the city’s waste from landfills. However, they cut the department (and Director Nic Espositos’ position) during pandemic budget cuts in May 2020.
The City of Philadelphia manages recycling through its Streets Department and Office of Sustainability.
You can’t. We can’t recycle our way out of the recycling problem.
Less than 100 years ago, it was common to reuse products and have the milkman drop off glass bottles at your house. Plastic wasn’t in the main (consumer) stream.
However, there were 35.7 million tons of plastic generated in 2018. And only 9% of plastic waste produced has ever been recycled.
Instead, here are ways to reduce your impact (waste), reuse, and buy locally to lessen the amount of recyclables in the stream. You won’t singlehandedly impact the city’s recycling amount, but the more people that get on the low-waste train, the better.
Our Philly Recycling Guide explains what you can and cannot recycle (aka put into your single-stream recycling bin) in the City of Philadelphia.
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