Across the United States, the recycling business is grappling with reducing contamination, narrowing collected materials to those with market value, improving processing and educating more effectively. Communities are renegotiating agreements with recycling processors. Some are reverting to separate collection of paper and containers from the easier but dirtier all-recyclables-in-one-bin to reduce contamination. Some are ceasing collection of some materials — particularly glass, which mostly hasn’t been recycled for years. This shake-up in the recycling market is an opportunity to rethink our overall waste management strategy and to re-evaluate the three R’s — reduce, reuse and recycle — to just stop being so wasteful.

This is the time to put more emphasis on reducing waste creation. Take plastic bags — actually, don’t. They are bad for most recycling programs and their equipment, as well as being an environmental disaster — especially the marine environment. The proposed New York State ban on single-use plastic bags is an important initiative for reducing waste and improving recycling programs. Support it.

Excessive packaging remains a problem — too many containers containing a container, often not recyclable. If manufacturers of plastic packaging made the resin codes easier to read, there would be less confusion about what is recyclable, reducing the contamination problem that undercuts the value of true recyclables.

Glass bottles can be reused, and there are opportunities developing for recycling them as well. Perhaps a product that traditionally has been stored in glass can transition to another more recyclable material such as aluminum.

This also is the opportunity to wean ourselves from plastic water bottles. We are not among those unfortunate people around the world who have no clean water. Bottled water costs on the order of 100 times as much as tap water. Certainly, an expanded bottle bill in Albany would provide a cleaner recycled waste stream than curbside pickup.

There are opportunities for entrepreneurs. Are there products that can be developed using recycled plastic resins? Can aspects of the U.S. paper industry be revitalized using recycled stock?

Perhaps waste-to-energy facilities can improve their recycling of metals. And, if plastic resins with no recycled value are diverted to WTE plants rather than tossed in landfills, at least there could be energy extracted for the electrical grid.

Communities need to aggressively remind residents of the importance of recycling. People are still largely unclear concerning what can and can’t be recycled. Public service announcements are critical. Most important, schools need to once again energize young minds about the value of waste reduction and recycling.

To read the full story, visit https://www.newsday.com/opinion/commentary/recycling-waste-1.26099065.

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