Recycling plastic isn’t rubbish but small items are a big 'no' for that bin

An impossible challenge
Unrecyclable small plastic items
A nuisance
Three inches max
The sorting dilemma
The quest to make 'small' recyclable
Exploding the recycling myth
Cheap labour
The fate of soft plastics
Resisting the plastic options
An impossible challenge

To live without plastic is nearly impossible nowadays. Everything from toothbrushes to our tubes of toothpaste is made from this indestructible material but our consciences are soothed as soon as we dispose of it in the recycling bin.

 

Unrecyclable small plastic items

Unfortunately, this action, done in good faith, does little to solve the plastic problem. According to Susan Collins, president of the Container Recycling Institute in the Washington Post, small plastic items, for example, do not get recycled.

 

A nuisance

In fact, they either fall through the net or complicate the recycling process as they are often made of different kinds of plastic (type 5 or 6), or are combined with other materials.

Three inches max

Too small to recycle means anything three inches or smaller in dimension, or thin and long like plastic straws.

 

The sorting dilemma

“Sorting all of those different types is impossible,” Judith Enck from Beyond Plastics told The Post.

 

The quest to make 'small' recyclable

The good news is, five companies, including Colgate-Palmolive and Procter & Gamble are working with Massachusetts Institute of Technology to develop a sorting procedure that means their smallest plastic products will get recycled, according to MIT News.

Exploding the recycling myth

Still, sorting for recycling is complicated in general as certain plastics are simply not recyclable, despite what we are led to believe.

 

"The Fraud of Plastic Recycling"

A report out this year from Climate Integrity called “The Fraud of Plastic Recycling” accuses the fossil fuel industry of promoting the idea that all plastics are recyclable when quite the opposite is true.

 

"Not technically or economically viable at scale"

This, the report states, is “despite their [the fossil fuel industry’s] long-standing knowledge that plastic recycling is not technically or economically viable at scale.”

Cheap labour

As sorting is expensive, it is often carried out in other countries where it is cheaper to sort through the plastics by hand.

 

The fate of soft plastics

Even there, soft plastics such as bread bags or clingfilm are not worth recycling financially and will invariably be burned for electricity or downcycled into items such as bin liners, The Guardian reports.

 

Resisting the plastic options

Only things made of 1 or 2 type plastics should be recycled, according to Collins in The Washington Post – the others, including small plastic items, should simply be avoided wherever possible.

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