MAUI AND PLASTIC
PACKAGING DON’T MIX
Plastic doesn't
recycle on Maui. In fact, Maui's plastic doesn't recycle on the mainland,
either. No market has been found
for the plastic collected by Maui County's Recycling Dropbox program during the
last eighteen months. It simply costs more to sort, bale and ship the plastic
than processors on the mainland are willing to pay.
If you want to
see how much of this homeless recycling exists in our midst, look east from the
Mokulele Highway at the Central Maui Baseyard next time you're out that way.
You'll see mounds of baled plastic that will soon be visible from the summit of
Haleakala; much like the Great Wall of China is from orbit.
The only
exception to this is a very small number of hand collected and manually
processed plastic milk jugs and laundry bottles that Tom Reed of Aloha Plastics
is willing to take. Tom makes plastic lumber products at his facility over by
the Kahului harbor.
Maui's plastic
dilemma is not exclusive. Plastic recycling on the Mainland is spotty - at best.
Most municipalities don't collect plastic, and most of plastic collected doesn't
make its way back into other products. The primary reason that no markets
exist for recycled plastic is that the major producers of plastic packaging are
not using post-consumer plastic in their bottles. Not Coke - not Pepsi.
The best thing we
as individuals can do is stop buying single use plastic packaging. If we want to
continue using and discarding plastic bottles, then we need to subsidize the
construction and operation of a material recovery facility (MRF) with our tax
dollars. Private industry will not enter this market unless there is profit to
be made.
Let's take
responsibility for our consumption and police ourselves. After all, if not us,
who?
Bob Armantrout