Plastic bottles pile up as mountains of waste
|
Miguel Llanos Reporter |
Beverage
industry opposition That
opposition certainly exists, but the beverage industry says it just doesn't
make sense to force a deposit law on consumers.
"This
cost burden placed on businesses is also passed along to consumers Ñ
levying a 'hidden tax' on both," the American Beverage Association said in
an issue statement on the topic.
Curbside
recycling at homes and businesses, as well as educating consumers, are the best
methods for dealing with container waste, the group adds.
Tom
Kinnaman, an economics professor at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Penn.,
believes that while recycling is expensive the debate needs to reflect what he
calls the "happiness" value of seeing litter cleaned up.
Factor that
in and a deposit law can make sense, says Kinnaman, whose research includes
household recycling trends.
"It
turns out recycling also provides utility," he says. "It benefits
society because it provides happiness for people in excess of what it costs to
provide the happiness."
High tech,
low tech A Colorado
company called Biota says it might have a way around the deposit controversy: a
biodegradable bottle. All of Biota's water bottles are made out of the
biodegradable plastic, which comes from corn starch in a process developed by
the seed company Cargill and Dow Chemical
Biota says
that while traditional plastic bottles can take 1,000 years to degrade in a
landfill, its bottles can biodegrade within 80 days in a commercial composting
operation.
Won't the
bottles dissolve on store shelves? Biota says they'll only degrade if they've
been emptied and placed in composting conditions Ñ high heat and humidity
as well as microorganisms to eat away.
Biota is
just getting off the ground, selling to a few health food stores in California,
Colorado and Nevada. But it plans to expand, and even sell via the Internet.
Franklin
sees hope in the biodegradable plastic, but adds that a big, unanswered
question is whether mixing those bottles with PET bottles might contaminate the
latter in the recycling process, making them useless.
"The
concern is if we are going to be able to transition to that type of plastic
what will be some of the impacts on companies that are trying to recycle PET
bottles out there," she says.
And what about a low-tech
approach of just educating the public to assume more responsibility, taking
those plastic bottles home to a recycling bin instead of leaving them in a
trash bin at a park?
"It's unrealistic to
think people are going to do that," Franklin says. "In this culture
it just doesn't seem to happen."
Energy & recycling
Ñ One recycled
aluminum can saves enough energy to power a television or computer for 3 hours
or a 100-watt light bulb for 20 hours. A six-pack of recycled aluminum cans
saves enough energy to drive a car 5 miles. Ñ Recycling one glass bottle
saves enough energy to light a 100-watt light bulb for 4 hours. Ñ
Recycling a one-gallon plastic milk jug will save enough energy to keep a 100-watt
bulb burning for 11 hours. Ñ Recycling one pound of steel conserves
enough energy to light a 60-watt bulb for 26 hours. Ñ Recycling a
one-foot high stack of newspapers saves enough electricity to heat a home for
17 hours.
Source: Waste Management