Waste reduction fast facts: Plastic
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Fast facts about waste reduction
› Plastic
This resource is not exhaustive nor is it all-inclusive, but can be cited and dated from primary and secondary sources. To find out more about the methodology or accuracy, contact the referenced source.
Metro does not validate nor endorse any of these facts.
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Plastic generation increased tenfold from 1960 to 2000. –EPA, “Municipal Solid Waste in the United States: 2000 Final Report,” EPA 530-R-02-001M, 2000
www.epa.gov/epaoswer/non-hw/muncpl/msw99.htm#links
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Electronics, health care, construction, transportation, automotive, and food packaging industries use the most plastic products. –Environmental Protection Agency, “Profile of the Rubber and Plastic Industry, 2nd Edition,” EPA/310-R-05-003, February 2005
http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/publications/assistance/sectors/notebooks/rubplasn.pdf
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It’s estimated that Americans go through about a hundred billion
plastic bags a year, or 360 bags per year for every man, woman and
child in the country. –Garbage Land: On the Secret Trail of Trash, Elizabeth Royte, Little, Brown and Company, 2005
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Five 2-liter recycled PET bottles produce enough fiberfill to make a ski jacket. –Environmental Protection Agency, 2002
www.epa.gov/epaoswer/non-hw/reduce/wstewise/wrr/factoid.htm
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Toothbrushes represent more than 100 million pounds of plastic waste each year. –Office of the Federal Enviro. Executive, White House task force on recycling, “Recycling for the Future,” June 1999
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In 2003, plastics accounted for 11 percent of the total materials discarded in the U.S. by weight. –EPA, “Municipal Solid Waste in the United States: 2003 Facts and Figures,” 2003
http://www.epa.gov/epaoswer/non-hw/muncpl/pubs/msw05rpt.pdf
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In the Portland metro region, plastics accounted for 12 percent of the total materials discarded in 2002 by weight. –Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, Waste Composition Study, 2002
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The 2003 recovery rate for plastic soda, water and other PET (#1)
bottles fell for the eighth consecutive year since 1995. The recovery
rate was 39.7 percent in 1995 and 19.6 percent in 2003. –National Association for PET Container Recycling (NAPCOR), 2003
Report on Post Consumer PET Container Recycling Activity, Final Report
http://www.napcor.com/2003_Report.pdf
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In 2002, only 11 percent of plastic water bottles were recycled in the U.S. –Garbage Land: On the Secret Trail of Trash, Elizabeth Royte, Little, Brown and Company, 2002
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Bottled water is the single largest growth area among all
beverages. Per capita consumption has more that doubled over the last
decade. –Beverage Marketing Corporation, 2005
http://www.beveragemarketing.com/
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About 1.3 million tons of PET (#1) bottles went into the trash or
were littered in 2002, more than double the amount wasted in 1995. –Container Recycling Institute, “The 10 cent Incentive to Recycling,” Jenny Gitlitz and Pat Franklin, 3rd
Edition, 2004
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Plastics used in durable goods (such as cars, electronics, and
appliances) account for the largest proportion by weight of plastics in
U.S. municipal solid waste. –Environmental Protection Agency, “Fact Sheet, Recycling the Hard Stuff,” EPA 530-F-02-023, July 2002
http://www.epa.gov/
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Although recycling is the most common method of plastic waste
pollution prevention, less than one percent of all plastics products
are recycled in the U.S. –Environmental Protection Agency, “Profile of the Rubber and Plastic Industry, 2nd Edition,” EPA/310-R-05-003, February 2005
http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/publications/assistance/sectors/notebooks/rubplasn.pdf
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Of the estimated 22.4 million tons of plastics produced in the
United States in 1998, only about 5.4 percent were recovered for
recycling. –Environmental Protection Agency, “Fact Sheet, Recycling the Hard Stuff,” EPA 530-F-02-023, July 2002
http://www.epa.gov/
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The recycling rate for rigid plastic containers in Oregon climbed slightly in 2003 to 27 percent. –Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, “Rigid Plastic Container Recycling Rate Report,” 2003
http://www.deq.state.or.us/wmc/solwaste/documents/rpc2003-05reprot.pdf
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Producing new plastic from recycled material uses only two-thirds of the energy required to manufacture it from raw materials. –Environmental Protection Agency, 2002
www.epa.gov/epaoswer/non-hw/reduce/wstewise/wrr/factoid.htm
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The number of plastics recycling businesses has nearly tripled
over the past several years, with more than 1,700 businesses handling
and reclaiming post-consumer plastics. –American Plastics Council, 2004
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In 2003, U.S. manufacturers consumed 552 million pounds of
post-consumer recycled PET (#1) plastic. Fiber product manufacturers
(which include carpet makers) used 54 percent of the material, followed
by food and beverage bottle manufacturers at 19 percent, and the
strapping industry at 14 percent. Sheet and film producers, nonfood
bottle makers and engineered resin producers used 6 percent, 4 percent
and 2 percent respectively. –National Association for PET Container Recycling (NAPCOR), 2003
Report on Post Consumer PET Container Recycling Activity, Final Report
http://www.napcor.com/2003_Report.pdf
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Forty-five percent of recycled HDPE (#2) bottles go into making
new bottles. The plastic pipe industry consumes 14 percent of the
recycled HDPE. Other strong markets for HDPE are lawn and garden
products (such as edging), plastic lumber (decks, benches, picnic
tables), film and sheet, and a variety of injection molded products
(buckets, crates and automobile parts). –American Plastics Council,
2002 National Post-Consumer Plastics Recycling Report
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In an EPA ranking of the twenty chemicals whose production
generates the most total hazardous waste, five of the top six are
chemicals commonly used by the plastic industry. –Garbage Land: On the Secret Trail of Trash, Elizabeth Royte, Little, Brown and Company, 2005
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According to the EPA Toxic Release Inventory Public Data
Release for 2002, the manufacture of rubber and plastics products
industry released over 71 million pounds of pollutants. –Environmental Protection Agency, “Profile of the Rubber and Plastic Industry, 2nd Edition,” EPA/310-R-05-003, February 2005
http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/publications/assistance/sectors/notebooks/rubplasn.pdf
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The plastics industry is second only to the chemical
industry in generating toxic releases that damage the ozone layer,
emitting more than 12 million pounds of ozone depleting chemicals in
1994. –Environmental Protection Agency, Toxics Release Inventory, page 196, 1994
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Production of low-density polyethylene (used to make many kinds
of packaging) generates 62-92 pounds of organic pollutants per ton of
product manufactured. In 1995, this amounted to approximately 500
million pounds of pollutants that needed to be burned, recycled or
discharged. –Chemical and Engineering News, June 24, 1996
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In 1999 marine researcher Charles Moore found six pounds of
floating plastic for every pound of naturally occurring zooplankton in
the North Pacific. He repeated the study in 2002 and found ten pounds
of plastic for each pound of zooplankton. –Garbage Land: On the Secret Trail of Trash, Elizabeth Royte, Little, Brown and Company, 2005
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Each year in the North Pacific alone, nearly 100,000 marine
mammals are killed by ingesting or getting tangled in plastic debris. –World Watch, March/April 2002
www.worldwatch.org/mag/2002/15-02.html
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Plastic pellets, which are unintentionally released into
oceans during production, transport or disposal, can carry levels of
pollution up to one million times more concentrated than that of
surrounding seawater. –World Watch, March/April 2002
www.worldwatch.org/mag/2002/15-02.htm
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Polyvinyl chloride, commonly known as "PVC" or "vinyl," is one of
the most common synthetic materials. Dioxin (the most potent carcinogen
known), ethylene dichloride and vinyl chloride are unavoidably created
in production of PVC and can cause severe health problems. –Healthy Building Network, “PVC in Buildings, Hazards and Alternatives” 2003
http://www.healthybuilding.net/pvc/HBN_FS_PVC_in_Buildings.pdf
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According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the top
three sources of dioxin emissions are municipal solid waste
incinerators, backyard burn barrels and medical waste incinerators.
This is due primarily to the amount of PVC in the waste stream. –Center for Health, Environment and Justice, “PVC and Solid Waste Disposal” (Accessed 8/05)
http://www.safealternatives.org/solidwaste.html
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Over 14 billion pounds of PVC are currently produced each
year in North America (about 75 percent is used in construction
materials). –Healthy Building Network, "PVC in Buildings, Hazards and Alternatives" 2003
http://www.healthybuilding.net/pvc/HBN_FS_PVC_in_Buildings.pdf
- The multitudes of additives in PVC make large-scale post consumer
recycling nearly impossible. The Association of Post Consumer Plastics
Recyclers declared it a contaminant in 1998. –Healthy Building Network, “PVC in Buildings, Hazards and Alternatives” 2003
http://www.healthybuilding.net/pvc/HBN_FS_PVC_in_Buildings.pdf
Related Links
Teach your students about recycling. Metro develops and maintains a wide selection of materials and programs for schools in Multnomah, Washington and Clackamas counties.
Use the directories or the recycler locator tool to find organizations that accept electronics, plastics, metal and many other materials.
Make the region greener at home, in your garden, at the store and on the road. Sustainable living renews rather than depletes the planet's resources and Metro can show you how.