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Rescuing Small Plastics From the Waste Stream

Five consumer products companies are working on a sorting process to keep small-format plastics inside the recycling chain

Photo by Tanvi Sharma on Unsplash

Aaron Krol
Thu, 03/02/2023 - 12:02
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As plastic pollution continues to mount, with growing risks to ecosystems and wildlife, manufacturers are beginning to make ambitious commitments to keep new plastics out of the environment. A growing number have signed onto the U.S. Plastics Pact, which pledges to make all plastic packaging reusable, recyclable, or compostable, and to see half of it effectively recycled or composted, by 2025.

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But for companies that make large numbers of small, disposable plastics, these pocket-sized objects are a major barrier to realizing their recycling goals.

“Think about items like your toothbrush, your travel-size toothpaste tubes, your travel-size shampoo bottles,” says Alexis Hocken, a second-year Ph.D. student in the MIT Department of Chemical Engineering. “They end up actually slipping through the cracks of current recycling infrastructure. So you might put them in your recycling bin at home, they might make it all the way to the sorting facility, but when it comes down to actually sorting them, they never make it into a recycled plastic bale at the very end of the line.”

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Comments

Submitted by Shawn on Thu, 03/02/2023 - 09:08

Plastic rescuing

Informative & eye-opening article, thanks

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