Overall, 2019 was another disappointing year for U.S. recycling efforts. Almost two years after East Asian countries began limiting U.S. recycling imports, there is still a severe lack of policies to deal with this massive disruption to our recycling system. Towns and counties are still cutting back on what types of material they will collect to recycle, or ending their curbside collection programs, as the cost of collecting and sorting recycling remains higher than the value of some of the recyclables collected.
The factors disrupting U.S. recycling efforts go beyond East Asian nations no longer being willing to buy as much U.S. recycling as they used to. Recycling is also undermined by a lack of corporate responsibility on the part of manufacturers for the products they create, a lack of access to recycling collection for many, limited U.S. domestic demand for recycled materials, and the rise of plastic, which raises multiple recycling challenges.
China’s National Sword and other East Asian import restrictions on recyclables did not break the U.S. recycling system, instead they exposed the flaws that have long been growing.