News Release
Container Recycling Institute
1911 Ft. Myer Drive, Suite 900
Arlington, Virginia 22209
703/276-9800 fax 276-9587
FOR RELEASE
April 11, 1997
CONTACT: Pat Franklin
Executive Director
$600 Million Worth Of Used Aluminum Beverage Cans Landfilled
In 1996
Group calls on beer and soda companies to halt the wasting of
energy and material resources by implementing voluntary deposit
system
WASHINGTON, DC -- The Container Recycling Institute (CRI) estimates
that the 36 billion aluminum cans landfilled last year had a scrap
value of more than $600 million. "We are literally throwing
money away when we don't reclaim valuable resources," said
Pat Franklin, Executive Director of CRI. "Over the past twenty
years we've trashed more than 11 million tons of aluminum beverage
cans worth over $12 billion on today's market. Some day we'll be
mining our landfills for the resources we've buried."
Franklin says it would cost approximately $2.5 billion to replace
the aluminum cans that are discarded each year in the U.S. with
new cans. "But," she said, "the hundreds of millions
of pounds and hundreds of millions of dollars worth of aluminum
cans landfilled last year are just part of a much bigger 'waste'
picture," said Franklin. "Mining, obtaining energy for
refining and the refining process itself have enormous environmental
impact."
Senator Jim Jeffords, (R-VT) has introduced a bill aimed at encouraging
recycling of aluminum cans and other materials. The bill would
require a 10-cent deposit on all beverage containers in states
where those containers have not achieved a 70 percent recycling
rate. "As we've seen in my home state of Vermont, bottle bills
are good for the environment and good for business," said
Jeffords. "The National Beverage Container Reuse and Recycling
Act of 1997 would increase recycling of aluminum cans and other
containers, save energy, conserve resources, create jobs and decrease
the generation of waste."
According to Franklin, the beer and soft drink industry could
avoid a mandatory deposit system by implementing a voluntary deposit
system and immediately boost the recycling rate for their aluminum,
glass, and plastic containers above 85 percent. CRI's research
shows that while the national recycling rate for aluminum cans
has never exceeded 65 percent, the average recycling rate for aluminum
cans and other beverage containers is 85 percent or higher in eight
states where these containers have a deposit value of a nickel
or a dime. "The five or ten-cent incentive keeps bottles and
cans off of streets and beaches and out of landfills in Michigan,
Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Oregon, Maine, Vermont and
Iowa. Even in California where beverage cans have a 2.5 cent value,
the recycling rate was 80 percent last year."
Critics of CRI's 'glass-half-empty' approach say CRI ignores the
strides that have been made in recycling and in the lightweighting
of aluminum cans. Franklin says she recognizes and applauds the
aluminum can manufacturing industry's successful efforts at source
reduction by reducing the weight of aluminum cans by 40 percent
over the past twenty years. "While I don't doubt their commitment
to the environment, it is a fact that can manufacturers realize
huge energy savings by making new cans out of used cans. This cost
savings is the primary motivation."
Franklin called on the end users of aluminum cans to offer solutions
to the problem. "The can manufacturing industry says it is
committed to recycling 'every can that is returned', said Franklin,
but the infrastructure has to be there to collect the cans. "It's
time for the end users, namely the beer and soft drink producers,
to take responsibility for the collection and recycling of their
containers. They could increase the recycling rate for aluminum
cans and the rest of their containers above 85 percent if they
instituted a voluntary deposit system."
"It should be obvious, by now, that we cannot rely on the
curbside recycling infrastructure to boost recycling rates for
aluminum cans, since a doubling of curbside programs over the past
six years has had virtually no impact on the aluminum can recycling
rate," Franklin said. "We're calling on the beer and
soft drink companies to halt the wasting of energy and material
resources from their one-way beverage containers by implementing
a voluntary deposit system."
# # #
The Container Recycling Institute (CRI) is a research and education
organization studying container and packaging recycling issues.
CRI plans to get some 'little known facts about aluminum can recycling'
to the general public through their web site at http://www.container-recycling.org
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