Tuesday, May 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

Improving Canada's recycling output will take 'radical changes': report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2019 06:43 PM

    An analysis of Canada's plastic industry shows the industry producing plastic dwarfs the industry trying to recycle it.

    The report, completed by consulting firms Deloitte and ChemInfo Services, was commissioned by Environment and Climate Change Canada to guide its plan to cut the country's plastics waste to zero.

    It found the plastics-manufacturing industry is a significant economic driver in Canada, worth $35 billion in sales of resins and plastic manufactured goods in 2017, and supporting about 93,000 jobs across more than 1,900 companies.

    By comparison, there were fewer than a dozen recycling companies, employing about 500 people and generating about $350 million in revenue.

    In 2016, 3.3 million tonnes of plastic ended up in the trash, 12 times the amount of plastic that was recycled. A small amount of plastics are burned for energy at five Canadian waste-to-energy plants. Almost 90 per cent of the plastic that is recycled in Canada is from packaging.

    Generally, the analysis says, it is cheaper and easier to produce new plastic, use it and then throw it away than it is to recycle, reuse or repair it. The voluntary standards for contents of plastic products, and additives like glues and labels, mean there is a lack of consistency in the plastic materials available for recycling. That in turn makes them more expensive to recycle.

    Canada also has very little demand for recycled plastic, which is why so much plastic has been shipped overseas. But the markets for recycled plastic are falling apart all over the world, leading shipments of Canadian plastics to be dumped in landfills or burn piles on foreign soil as well.

    Environment Minister Catherine McKenna says Canada is throwing out billions of dollars of plastic every year and is working on a plan to have Canadians reuse or recycle all plastics or burn them for energy within 20 years. That plan is supposed to be unveiled this month.

    "We're literally throwing in the garbage, $120 (billion) to $150 billion in value," she said last week. "We can do a lot better."

    The Deloitte report shows getting to zero plastic waste will require "radical changes" in consumer behaviour, an explosion in the number of recycling facilities in Canada, investments in recycling technology, and a litany of government policies such as landfill taxes or requiring products to include a certain proportion of recycled material. Requiring more recycled content would help create market demand in Canada for recycled plastic, regardless of the cost of new plastic.

    The report suggests Canada could get to the point where 90 per cent of plastic avoids landfill by 2030 with an investment of between $4.3 billion and $8.6 billion, the addition of 167 new sorting and recycling facilities, a lot of government regulation and consumer willpower. That would increase revenues in the recycling industry from $500 million to $3 billion, and create 42,000 new direct and indirect jobs.

    Sarah King, head of the oceans-and-plastic program for Greenpeace Canada, said the report is so focused on increasing recycling it avoids almost any discussion of cutting down how much plastic we use in the first place.

    King said her fear is that Canada is not having the hard conversation about banning certain plastic products entirely — everything from plastic grocery bags and black garbage bags to plastic cups and take-out containers. Several municipalities in Canada are looking at such bans and the whole province of Prince Edward Island is set to ban plastic grocery bags on July 1.

    King said the leadership has to come from Ottawa."Ultimately we want to move towards a ban on all non-essential plastics," she said.

    Canadians produce so much plastic that recycling just can't handle the volume and "the only way to address an endless flowing tap is to turn it off," she said.

    She also is concerned that Deloitte's zero-plastic-garbage outline includes burning one-fifth of plastic waste for energy. Burning facilities are less picky about what is in the plastic they are taking than recyclers are, which reduces the burden on consumers to properly sort their items and allows for a wider variety of items to be collected.

    But King said, burning plastic produces ash and other toxic pollutants along with any energy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Gives Final Instructions To Jury In Murder Trial Of 12-Year-Old B.C. Girl

    Judge Gives Final Instructions To Jury In Murder Trial Of 12-Year-Old B.C. Girl
    A British Columbia Supreme Court judge says jurors will need to use their common sense in assessing the reliability of an alleged confession by a man accused of killing a 12-year-old girl.

    Judge Gives Final Instructions To Jury In Murder Trial Of 12-Year-Old B.C. Girl

    Voting Ban For Long-Term Expats Unconstitutional, Supreme Court Rules

    Voting Ban For Long-Term Expats Unconstitutional, Supreme Court Rules
    In a long-awaited decision that solidifies voting rights, the Supreme Court of Canada rejected government arguments that the law, enacted in 1993, promoted electoral fairness.

    Voting Ban For Long-Term Expats Unconstitutional, Supreme Court Rules

    Manitoba Officials Seize Newborn From Mom In Hospital; Video Prompts Outrage

    Manitoba Officials Seize Newborn From Mom In Hospital; Video Prompts Outrage
    The apprehension was broadcast live on social media by a family member and has prompted strong reactions from many who have viewed it.

    Manitoba Officials Seize Newborn From Mom In Hospital; Video Prompts Outrage

    Man Charged With First-Degree Murder Of Newfoundland Indigenous Woman

    Man Charged With First-Degree Murder Of Newfoundland Indigenous Woman
    CONNE RIVER, N.L. — A Newfoundland man has been charged with the first-degree murder of a 28-year-old Indigenous woman whose death shook her small, rural First Nation.    

    Man Charged With First-Degree Murder Of Newfoundland Indigenous Woman

    Tiny Coffeeshops Help Owners Save On Rent In High-Cost Toronto, Vancouver

    Customers who don't work in the building that houses Kento Kitayama's tiny cafe near Vancouver's Gastown neighbourhood better be prepared to settle for takeout. 

    Tiny Coffeeshops Help Owners Save On Rent In High-Cost Toronto, Vancouver

    Former Alberta MLA Don Macintyre Told His Child Victim God Approved The Sexual Abuse

    RED DEER, Alta. — A former Alberta politician has pleaded guilty to one count of sexual interference involving a 10-year-old girl.

    Former Alberta MLA Don Macintyre Told His Child Victim God Approved The Sexual Abuse