Plastics – Retention in Landfill

Many people believe that plastics comprise the majority of all municipal solid waste. This is simply not so. Studies have shown that plastics make up approximately nine per cent of all municipal solid waste by weight and 14-20 per cent by volume.

Although waste management practices, such as recycling and reduction, will reduce the amount of waste going into landfill, there will always be some material that cannot be disposed of through these methods. Even energy recovery facilities end up with some waste, albeit very small quantities. More often than not, these residuals end up in a landfill environment.

Contrary to popular belief, very little degrades in a modern landfill. Modern landfills are sited and operated to avoid wet conditions and prevent as much biodegradation as possible. When organic matter does degrade in landfills, one of the emissions is methane gas (a greenhouse gas 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide). This means that biodegradable products in landfill are not necessarily a good thing and one of the reasons why Germany prohibited any form of degradable materials from entering their landfills in June 2005.

Plastics have numerous advantages over other materials when the are disposed of by landfilling due to the fact that they are easily compressed and have an inherent intertness meaning that they do not leach contaminents and can help stabilize materials in a landfill.

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California SB 54 Is Here: What Companies Using Plastic Packaging Need To Do Now | JD Supra

SB 54, the Plastic Pollution Prevention and Packaging Producer Responsibility Act, was signed into law on June 30, 2022. Its goal is to create a framework that shifts waste management costs from the local government onto producers. To that end, SB 54 requires producers to (1) reduce the use of Covered Materials; and (2) ensure that all Covered Materials are recyclable or compostable by 2032. The definition of a producer is not 100% straightforward. You are considered a producer if you are the person who manufactures a product that uses covered material and who owns or is the licensee of the brand or trademark under which the product is used in a commercial enterprise, sold, offered for sale, or distributed in the state. [1] However, if no such person is located in California, the producer of the covered material is the owner or, if the owner is not in the state, the exclusive licensee of a brand or trademark under which the product using the covered material is used in a commercial enterprise, sold, offered for sale, or distributed in the state. [2] But if there is no such person in California either, the producer is the person who sells, offers for sale, or distributes the product that uses the covered material in or into the state. [3] To the extent you are a producer, the final regulations implementing SB 54 which went into effect May 1, 2026 have set near-term milestones with which you must comply. First, by June 1, 2026, all producers (subject to very limited exceptions) must either (1) participate in an approved Producer Responsibility Organization ( PRO ), or (2) decide to comply individually and register with CalRecycle. Depending on which path a producer decides to follow, it will also be subject to subsequent deadlines. Producers who plan to participate in an approved PRO must have a producer responsibility plan in place by June 15, 2026. If you choose to comply individually and register with CalRecycle, they must approve you, and once...