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Most plastic waste is recycled into new products.

Now we know:

Only about 9% of plastic ever produced has been recycled. Most is landfilled, incinerated, or enters the environment. Recycling symbols on plastic are resin identification codes, not recyclability guarantees.

Disproven 2017

What changed?

The recycling symbol is everywhere. The three chasing arrows stamped on the bottom of every plastic bottle, bag, and food container have come to mean something simple and reassuring: this material can be recycled; your waste will become something new. The message took hold from the late 1980s onward, accompanied by public information campaigns, school curricula, and municipal curbside programmes. By the 2000s, the belief that recycling solved the plastic problem was nearly universal in wealthy countries.

It was, in significant part, a story the plastics industry promoted to protect its business model.

The chasing-arrows symbol was adopted in 1988 as a resin identification code, a system developed by ASTM International to help sorting facilities identify the type of plastic, not to indicate that it was recyclable. The seven numbered categories (PET, HDPE, PVC, LDPE, PP, PS, and 'other') include several plastics, particularly categories 3 through 7, that have rarely or never been economically recyclable at scale. Yet many municipalities placed all plastics bearing the symbol in their recycling streams, and residents reasonably assumed it was all going somewhere useful.

For decades, much of it was going to China. The world's collected plastic waste was shipped east, where cheap labour made sorting and processing economically viable. In 2018, China implemented its National Sword policy, banning imports of most foreign recyclables. Within months, the flow stopped. Municipalities that had been 'recycling' their plastic discovered they were now burying it in landfills or incinerating it. The infrastructure that had maintained the illusion collapsed almost overnight.

The underlying numbers had been published a year earlier. In 2017, Roland Geyer and colleagues published the first global analysis of all plastic ever produced in Science Advances: of 8.3 billion metric tonnes manufactured since the 1950s, only 9% had ever been recycled. About 12% had been incinerated. The remaining 79% had accumulated in landfills or entered the natural environment. The ocean plastic crisis, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, microplastics in fish tissue, plastic fragments in Arctic sea ice, is the direct consequence.

Internal industry documents obtained by journalists and researchers showed that plastics producers had understood as early as the 1970s that large-scale plastic recycling was economically impractical, and had funded public recycling messaging anyway. The symbol was not a description of a working system. It was a marketing strategy, one that transferred responsibility for an unmanageable waste problem from manufacturers to individual consumers, and kept it there for four decades.

Plastic bottles and debris floating in ocean water, illustrating the scale of plastic pollution.
Plastic waste in the ocean - only about 9% of all plastic ever produced has been recycled. The rest ends up in landfills, incinerators, or the environment. · T.K. Naliaka - CC BY-SA 2.0
The number 7 inside a triangle of chasing arrows - the resin identification code for 'OTHER' plastics, placed on plastic products.
The resin identification code - the chasing-arrows symbol - was designed to classify plastic types for sorting, not to guarantee recyclability. · Public Domain

At a glance

Disproven
2017
Believed since
1988
Duration
29 years
Taught in schools
2010 – 2017

Sources

  1. [1] Production, use, and fate of all plastics ever made - Geyer, R., Jambeck, J.R., and Law, K.L., 2017
  2. [2] The Plastics Industry's Decades-Long Bet on Recycling to Fend Off Bans - NPR / Laura Sullivan, 2020
  3. [3] China's National Sword Policy and Global Plastic Waste - Brooks, A.L., Wang, S., and Jambeck, J.R., 2018