Plastic bottles banned from landfills
One of
It better not be counting on the surrounding area for raw material.
Seven of the
The region has nowhere to go but up. A state law taking effect Thursday could help. Recyclable plastic bottles with screw tops or snap caps will be banned from landfills.
In a region where tons of the bottles apparently end up in landfills every year, will people who don't find it easy being green have anything to worry about?
Enforcement of the law is critical, said Ron Salati, general manager of Clear Path Recycling LLC, which is building the
"It's going to be a difficult task," said Salati.
Others outside government are more skeptical.
On the Web site of the political-chat television show "NC Spin," a blogger asked: "What good does it do to pass a law requiring citizens to recycle plastic bottles if there is no penalty when they don't?"
The legal burden will fall largely on landfill operators rather than consumers.
"There's not going to be a recycling police," said Jerry Dietzen, head of
The N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources will watch for large quantities of plastic bottles being dumped in landfills, said state recycling coordinator Scott Mouw.
If a waste hauler is spotted with a lot of bottles to dump, Dietzen said, state inspectors will try to trace the load to find out who threw the containers in the trash. The inspectors will acquaint those responsible with the new law, Dietzen said.
But inspectors may sanction landfill operators for disposal violations, Mouw said, just like the state does now for windblown debris or polluted groundwater.
Salati said Clear Path will accept any help it can get. "Anything that's kept out of a landfill is additional product that's available for recycling for us," he said.
County rankings
The latest state figures suggest
The county recycled barely half a pound of plastic bottles per resident in 2008. That was 87th out of 100 counties in the state.
But those figures are more than a year old, covering a 12-month period that ended June 30, 2008.
Dietzen promised that
That report, due in December, will cover a period that coincides with the first year that the city picked up recyclable material at single-family residences.
Besides curbside pickup, Dietzen said, the city has begun collecting plastic bottles from public buildings and will start doing the same at athletic fields this fall.
The best bottle recyclers in the
"It has to start with the county commissioners," said J.R. Horne,
Horne estimated that 80 percent of
At the other end of the regional scale is
That might explain why
Jerry Blanchard, director of the Harnett County General Services Department, blamed the state reporting process.
Nevertheless,
Jon Parsons, executive director of the regional environmental group Sustainable Sandhills, said
"I expect that Harnett's ranking will also improve in the next year's report," Parsons said in an e-mail, "although I wouldn't expect as much improvement as Cumblerland's."
Nationwide trends
Salati said recycling rates jump above 60 percent in states with bottle-deposit laws, such as
Weak as
Unfortunately for Clear Path, increased recycling in the vicinity of the new plant won't boost efficiency much.
By 2012, when the plant is expected to be fully operational, it will be able to handle 20 percent of all polyethylene terephthalate bottles, or PET, that are recycled in the nation. PET bottles have the number 1 embossed on the bottom.
The
Yet even if Clear Path recycled every PET bottle discarded in the state, Salati said, the plant would still operate at less than half of its capacity.
Clear Path will need to bring in plastic bottles from 48 of the 50 states, he said.



