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EPR for Packaging Update

AMERIPEN’s Dan Felton looks at the implementation of EPR laws for packaging in Oregon, Maine, Colorado, and California.

Dan Felton, Executive Director, AMERIPEN
Dan Felton, Executive Director, AMERIPEN

Last September, we took a deep dive on the substance of new packaging producer responsibility laws in the U.S. As a reminder, Maine and Oregon enacted laws in 2021, and Colorado and California followed suit in 2022. Packaging producers (generally brand owners) will start paying into all these new systems over the next three to four years—in Colorado and Oregon in mid-2025, in Maine in late 2026, and in California in early 2027. In January, we gave a brief update on implementation of those four laws. A lot has happened in terms of implementation of these laws, so let’s take a closer look.

Oregon

As previously reported, Oregon is moving quickest with implementation of its law, including significant work performed by the Recycling Material Acceptance Lists Technical Workgroup, the Oregon Recycling System Advisory Council, and the Rulemaking Advisory Committee.

The Oregon Recycling Modernization Act (RMA) requires the Oregon Environmental Quality Commission (EQC) to identify by rule two lists of materials, the first being materials collected by local governments or their service providers and the second being materials a producer responsibility organization (PRO) must provide for collection through a recycling depot or mobile collection events. In March 2022, the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) closed a public comment period on a request for information seeking intelligence to help evaluate materials under consideration. The Recycling Material Acceptance Lists Technical Workgroup then met six times between March and September of 2022 and provided information and feedback on evaluation methods, data sources, and preliminary research findings for various materials. Later this year, DEQ will formally propose rules to the EQC that identify acceptance lists and collection targets/standards.


Read article   Download a free copy of the PMMI/AMERIPEN report, “2023 Packaging Compass: Evaluating Trends in U.S. Packaging Design Over the Next Decade and Implications for the Future of a Circular Packaging System.”


The Oregon Recycling System Advisory Council (ORSAC), on which AMERIPEN holds a seat, was established under the RMA to DEQ and the PROs on key recycling system elements, including the uniform statewide collection list, PRO program plans, and more. The ORSAC represents local governments, community-based organizations representing the interests of historically underserved groups, small business, environmental nonprofit organizations, the recycling industry, service providers, processors, or material end users and producers of covered products or producer trade associations or suppliers. The ORSAC has already met six times between March 2022 and April 2023 and will continue throughout ongoing implementation in perpetuity. Work of the ORSAC to date has included review and discussion of the previously mentioned material acceptance lists, PRO obligations, local government compensation, responsible end markets, and numerous rules under development to implement the RMA.

Oregon DEQ is undertaking rulemaking to clarify and implement the RMA. The first rulemaking began in 2022 and relates to requirements under the RMA producers of packaging, paper products, and food-service ware to support and expand recycling services in Oregon for their products. Topics under consideration for this first set of rules include producer responsibility program plan content; DEQ’s administrative fees; the funding and reimbursement of local governments for eligible recycling-related expenses; and the materials suitable for recycling collection in Oregon. The Rulemaking Advisory Committee was chartered to review technical issues and fiscal impacts related to the proposed rules, and its members reflect a range of entities that will be both directly and indirectly affected by the rules. They have met six times between July 2022 and April 2023. DEQ plans to begin a second rulemaking later in 2023 covering additional topics, with that second rulemaking process carrying into 2024.

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