Colorado officials are planning to boost the state’s lagging recycling rate by launching free recycling for every household in the state starting in 2026. This recycling overhaul in the works, with capacity assessments scheduled this year followed by system design, will allow statewide recycling at no cost based on a list of materials that can be recycled, according to officials at the Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment.

CDPHE’s materials management unit chief Wolf Kray on Thursday confirmed the push for free recycling statewide but declined to discuss it pending approval from agency information gatekeepers. It’s unclear whether Colorado residents in cities such as Denver, and local governments, still would have to fund recycling after 2026.

A nonprofit nationwide Circular Action Alliance has been tasked with developing a convenient, cost-effective system for Colorado and other states. A new state law (Producer Responsibility Program for Statewide Recycling Act) requires makers of products sold in Colorado to create a “producer responsibility organization” and a system to cover the costs of recycling statewide. Nationwide, states’ average portion of waste materials recycled hovers around 30%. In Colorado, state officials have estimated the rate remains roughly 16%. The state law requires the government to set minimum recycling targets by 2030 and 2035. State officials have declared Coloradans will divert 45% of their waste to recycling before 2036.

To read the full story, visit https://www.greeleytribune.com/2023/05/05/free-statewide-recycling-colorado-2026/.
Author: Bruce Henley, Greeley Tribune
Image: H Richardson, The Denver Post, Greeley Tribune

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