Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    EU recyclers make case for solvent-based methods

    The electronics recycling industry has a plastics problem

    MP Materials breaks ground on rare earth magnet campus in North Texas

    How critical mineral alliances aim to shape the future of e-scrap metals

    Certification Scorecard — Week of May 18, 2026

    Aurubis: Thefts involved scrap sample manipulation

    Metals and electronics recyclers report growth

    Plastic packaging

    Why SB 54 source reduction planning is becoming the industry’s most challenging EPR test

    Recycler cites market pressure in short-term closure

    AI, data anxiety push enterprises to destroy working devices: report

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
      • All Topics
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    EU recyclers make case for solvent-based methods

    The electronics recycling industry has a plastics problem

    MP Materials breaks ground on rare earth magnet campus in North Texas

    How critical mineral alliances aim to shape the future of e-scrap metals

    Certification Scorecard — Week of May 18, 2026

    Aurubis: Thefts involved scrap sample manipulation

    Metals and electronics recyclers report growth

    Plastic packaging

    Why SB 54 source reduction planning is becoming the industry’s most challenging EPR test

    Recycler cites market pressure in short-term closure

    AI, data anxiety push enterprises to destroy working devices: report

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
      • All Topics
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home Plastics

Companies push for quality as Chinese demand evaporates

Colin StaubbyColin Staub
October 25, 2017
in Plastics

Operators of materials recovery facilities are increasing their labor forces and installing additional sorting equipment in response to Chinese restrictions on scrap imports. As companies increase sortation efforts to create a higher-quality output, attention is also turning to the domestic plastics processing market.

Four materials recovery facility (MRF) operators and a plastics recycling expert were among the speakers on an Oct. 19 webinar hosted by The Recycling Partnership. The webinar, which drew more than 500 listeners, broke down how different MRFs in different regions of the U.S. are being impacted and are responding, as well as what the changes mean for the future of domestic plastics recovery.

Input quality is key

Bob Cappadona, vice president of Casella Recycling, said his company has added workers on the tip floor, on the sort lines and near the balers to inspect for quality.

Casella has six MRFs in the Northeast, and they are increasingly breaking bales to ensure maximum quality. There has been a renewed focus on the quality of material entering the MRF, Cappadona said, with workers looking at every load on the tip floor.

“It is very difficult to make a good quality product … without a quality input,” he said.

Equally important, Casella is ensuring its sort lines are running at their designed tons-per-hour throughput.

“There’s no sense in running it any faster, which takes discipline,” Cappadona said. It can be a hard call, he added, particularly when material is stacking up on the tip floor.  But if equipment is pushed over its designed throughput, “you have quality issues, you don’t have pure separation, so it affects it downstream,” he said.

Casella has seen slow movement of material, he said, particularly on the fiber grades. The materials formerly bound for China are now heading to Thailand, Indonesia, India and other countries, and some material has been pushed domestically.

“It always starts with quality but it always ends with price.” — Hilary Gans, South Bayside Waste Management Authority facility operations contract manager

The biggest impact has been the sharp decline in commodity values, Cappadona said, describing a 50 percent decline in the value of the single-stream ton as a whole.

Inspections increase

From Northern California, a public waste management agency described erratic movement of materials and drops in plastics and fiber pricing. The South Bayside Waste Management Authority (SBWMA) is storing materials more than usual due to the inconsistent ability to move shipments, said Hilary Gans, the agency’s facility operations contract manager.

The SBWMA is a joint solid waste agency with a dozen member municipalities around the San Francisco Bay Area.

Gans said many MRF operators in Northern California are in a similar position. He also described reports of companies filling warehouses with bales in Long Beach, a major fiber exporting port in Southern California.

Gans said the agency doesn’t plan to landfill materials unless it is strongly pressed to do so, noting that it creates a public relations problem for any recycling program. But if the mixed plastics market doesn’t stabilize, he said, the agency might consider removing some of those materials from its list of collected recyclables.

The agency has hired more sorters and is inspecting 1 in 10 bales, Gans said, to maximize quality.

He described the dramatic drop in pricing for recyclables since China made its announcement. The agency has adjusted its budget based on the Chinese policy changes, Gans said, as it has in the past during periods of heightened focus on quality.

“It always starts with quality but it always ends with price,” he said.

New equipment installations

Bill Keegan, president of Dem-Con Companies, which operates a MRF about 20 miles outside Minneapolis, said his facility is slowing down sort lines in response to the policy changes. That results in less production and higher labor costs per ton. He said the region has an increased need for processing capacity since it has slowed lines.

“Tonnages that were processed at a facility easily previous to the National Sword are now being moved over to even competitors’ facilities that have excess capacity just to handle those volumes,” he said.

Dem-Con has looked to hire more employees but has had trouble doing so, Keegan said, pointing to the 3 percent unemployment rate in the region as a challenge. In response, the company has begun looking toward automation. The company has added an optical sorter in the past month, he said, and is also experimenting with adding robotics to its line. Resource Recycling previously wrote about a carton-sorting robot the company has installed at its MRF.

Dem-Con has seen some of its markets dry up due to China’s policy changes, Keegan said, particularly for film.

“We’re working with municipalities to communicate that, so they don’t continue to increase the variety of items in the bin when we’re having challenges moving the standard items that we’re seeing in there,” Keegan said.

The changes have also led to an increased focus on contractual negotiations, Keegan said, particularly ensuring the company’s contracts with municipalities are more transparent and sustainable and share the risk between both entities.

“When we’re not seeing that in an RFP, we’ve recently just not bid contracts,” he said.

“We kind of have a chicken and the egg problem where it’s hard to justify infrastructure investment sometimes when we’ve had demand from an export market.” — Nathan Jeffay, More Recycling sustainability consultant

Driving up domestic demand

With material movement slowing, domestic markets have received renewed attention as potential downstream outlets. Nathan Jeffay of More Recycling examined how much material is exported and how much domestic processing capacity exists today.

The results vary widely based on the resin. Looking at figures for 2015, Jeffay noted 28 percent of plastic recovered in the U.S. was exported. But by materials and resin types, 52 percent of film was exported, while just 11 percent of HDPE bottles were sent out of the country, as examples.

For PET and HDPE bottles, U.S. reclamation capacity currently exceeds domestic collection, according to figures from More Recycling. But on the non-bottle rigids and film side, collection exceeds processing capacity, hence the reliance on export markets.

“With that, we kind of have a chicken and the egg problem where it’s hard to justify infrastructure investment sometimes when we’ve had demand from an export market … ,” Jeffay said.

The non-bottle rigid stream is made up predominantly of polypropylene, Jeffay said, with more than 511 million pounds of PP recovered in this stream in 2015. HDPE is the next largest, with 405 million pounds collected the same year.

PS has strong domestic markets, although isolating it into its own stream presents a challenge, as does foam PS requiring densification. PP presents the strongest potential for growth in the rigid plastic reclamation market, due to the amount that’s collected and its value as a feedstock.

“When it can be separated out from those 3-7 bales, tubs and lids, caps, even some of the bottles … that is highly valued material,” Jeffay said. He noted that “the more segregated this material can be, the stronger the market is.” That means relying on secondary sorting facilities, or plastics recycling facilities (PRFs), to isolate PP from mixed bales and provide the valuable stream for reclaimers, Jeffay said.

Tags: MarketsProcessorsTrade & Tariffs
TweetShare
Colin Staub

Colin Staub

Colin Staub was a reporter and associate editor at Resource Recycling until August 2025.

Related Posts

EPR rules take shape in Oregon, as first test

Oregon OKs end-market verification from CAA

byStefanie Valentic
May 20, 2026

The state's Department of Environmental Quality has given the stamp of approval on CAA's Responsible End Markets program plan amendment.

Aurubis smelter pipe system and chimney.

Aurubis sends positive signal for metals recovery markets

byDavid Daoud
May 18, 2026

The company’s performance is often seen as a bellwether for downstream appetite for complex electronic scrap and industrial recycling feedstock.

Bottle bill backers see opportunity for action

PET collapse exposes gaps in US recycling infrastructure

byStefanie Valentic
May 15, 2026

Joaquin Mariel, Circular Services president, broke down why recycling infrastructure is so hard to scale and used PET's rapid market...

Extruder pushes out natural HDPE pellets at KW Plastics in Troy, Alabama.

Rare look inside the world’s largest plastics recycler

byBrian Clark Howard
May 13, 2026

KW Plastics in Troy, Alabama is a leading recycler of PP and HDPE—here’s a glimpse behind the gates.

PP bales rise, paper grades edge higher

byRecyclingMarkets.net Staff
May 11, 2026

The national average price of post-consumer PET beverage bottles and jars rose marginally in May, now averaging 2.24 cents per...

May pricing bullish for most bales

May pricing bullish for most bales

byAntoinette Smith
May 11, 2026

Parts of the struggling recycling sector are seeing upside in war-related surges in commodity pricing.

Load More
Next Post

Advanced RPET plant on the way near LA

More Posts

Revised CA budget includes $200m for recycling

Revised CA budget includes $200m for recycling

May 20, 2026
Bottle bill backers see opportunity for action

PET collapse exposes gaps in US recycling infrastructure

May 15, 2026
Plastic packaging

Why SB 54 source reduction planning is becoming the industry’s most challenging EPR test

May 19, 2026
Aurubis: Thefts involved scrap sample manipulation

Metals and electronics recyclers report growth

May 20, 2026
Industry descends on DC to fight for PET

Industry descends on DC to fight for PET

May 13, 2026

Price increases help end user offset higher OCC

December 10, 2024
Recycler cites market pressure in short-term closure

AI, data anxiety push enterprises to destroy working devices: report

May 19, 2026
Study quantifies lithium battery threat to infrastructure

Battery fires remain elevated in early 2026: report

May 1, 2026
Niagara acquires rPlanet Earth assets in California

Niagara acquires rPlanet Earth assets in California

May 15, 2026

How a pyrolysis firm handles EnergyBag plastics

January 27, 2021
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Policy Now
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.