Last year, Closed Loop Partners, and firms that co-invested including Goldman Sachs, Citi, Google and Engie, invested over $210 million dollars in companies that are building a circular economy. The world’s largest consumer goods companies are on board too, many making public commitments to use recycled content ratios of up to 50% in their products.

Why? Because they see opportunity – and value. Natural resource extraction is expensive and landfills are unsustainable. As we shift towards a regenerative, circular economy and unlock the embodied $1 trillion value, we know that recycling is a crucial piece of the puzzle. Let’s take a minute to appreciate the true value of recycling in America – and let’s commit to keep going.

Recycling is Profitable: It’s good for taxpayers, municipalities, manufacturers, and investors

The recycling industry is an economic engine, providing over 500,000 jobs in America and creating more than $100 billion in revenue. The metal, paper, plastics, electronics, textiles and glass in the recycling stream are inherently valuable. While commodity markets do fluctuate, most of our waste still commands high prices, especially materials like PET, used in water bottles, which sold for $309 per ton, or clear HDPE, used in milk jugs, for $734 per ton, on average in 2018. Let’s think about the alternatives. If these materials end up in landfills, it’s taxpayers’ money that foots the bill. With a national average disposal cost of more than $50/ton, communities would have to pay over $3 billion annually in additional landfill disposal fees if these materials weren’t recycled.

Recycling Reduces Costs & Volatility: That’s good for business

With scarce resources and increasingly volatile markets, many of the world’s largest corporations are shifting toward circular supply chains that are stable, protect the environment and reduce costs.  In doing so, they avoid the volatile extraction costs embedded in manufacturing materials, like plastic. The demand for recycled materials is growing.

The Industry is Growing Here at Home: The opportunities are endless

When China stopped importing foreign scrap, the recycling industry was shaken. Business as usual no longer sufficed. But this wasn’t an end to the industry, it was a wake-up call. It pushed us to invest in domestic infrastructure, process our own waste and deliver higher quality bales of recycled materials. Materials Recovery Facilities (MRFs) that were already doing this, like Eureka Recycling in Minnesota, were less vulnerable to China’s bans. The residual contamination rates of their operations are less than 8 percent and 90 percent of their recovered material goes to markets in the state, supporting regional growth.  MRFs are now identifying opportunities to up their game and invest in new equipment and technologies to enhance their performance.  Innovative companies like AMP Robotics are gaining traction; they use AI and robotic arms to effectively sort materials. More and more investment opportunities are materializing. Global companies like Nine Dragons, one of the largest paper manufacturers in China, are now investing hundreds of millions of dollars on recycling infrastructure in the US.

To read the full story, visit https://www.closedlooppartners.com/3-reasons-why-recycling-is-good-business-in-america-and-a-key-driver-of-the-circular-economy/.

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