AB 997, as introduced, Travis Allen. Recycling: plastic material.
Existing law requires the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery to administer state programs to recycle solid waste, plastic trash bags, plastic packaging containers, waste tires, newsprint, and other specified materials.
The existing California Integrated Waste Management Act of 1989 requires each city, county, city and county, and regional agency, if any, to develop a source reduction and recycling element of an integrated waste management plan containing specified components. The element is required to divert 50% of the solid waste subject to the element, except as specified, through source reduction, recycling, and composting activities. The act also declares that it is the policy goal of the state that not less than 75% of solid waste generated be source reduced, recycled, or composted by the year 2020, and annually thereafter.
This bill would restate the policy goal of the state to provide that the goal is for not less than 75% of solid waste generated to be source reduced, recycled, used for power generation in dedicated anaerobic digesters as well as in modern landfills capturing methane gas, or composted by the year 2020, and annually thereafter. The bill would also require the department to investigate emerging technologies that convert used plastic, textile, and fiber products into new plastic feedstock and monomers, adopt regulations and protocols by January 1, 2017, that encourage waste-to-energy and waste-to-fuel pyrolysis projects that address the various types and grades of plastic, textile, and fiber products that are disposed of in landfills, and, beginning January 1, 2017, and each year thereafter, examine and report to the Legislature on possible incentives for locating in-state those businesses and organizations that practice state-of-the-art, cost-effective material separation and recovery techniques as well as those organizations that are now commercially developing the most cost-effective conversion of mixed plastic, textile, and fiber wastes to fuels.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) California’s goal of diverting not less than 75 percent of
4solid waste, including plastic products, from landfills has proven
5difficult to meet with current practices. In November of 2014, the
6California State Auditor reported, in regard to the beverage
7container recycling program alone, that in each of the last four
8fiscal years it operated at a deficit, and that the gap between
9expenditures and revenues exceeded $100 million in three of those
10four fiscal years.
11(b) California’s goal of diverting not less than 75 percent of
12solid waste, including plastic products, from landfills does not take
13into account that
landfills will continue for the foreseeable future
14to be the only disposal alternative for many plastic products.
15(c) Existing law and current policies do not recognize new
16technologies that are available both to maximize the reusable
17lifespan of plastic products as well as to recover the latter’s energy
18and fuel potential, and that are integral to meeting the state’s
19diversion goals. These new technologies and changed policies
20could address several obstacles that the state currently faces
21primarily with regard to the recycling of plastic products, including,
22but not limited to, all of the following:
23(1) The multicomponent construction of many plastic products
24such as plastic containers with integral caps and valves.
P3 1(2) The usage history of plastic products, such as nonhazardous
2used hospital coverings.
3(3) Varying contamination levels of plastic products, such as
4food service wastes and plastic products used for floor cleaning.
5(4) The diversity of plastic grades, or types of plastic, within
6each plastic material class.
7(d) According to the federal Environmental Protection Agency,
8in 2011, 13.1 million tons of textiles ended up in landfills, an
9 increase of 44 percent from 1999, while only 2 million tons were
10diverted from landfills. The low diversion percentage is largely
11due to the multicomponent nature of many textiles that are in the
12landfills. Further, 60 percent of textiles that end up in landfills are
13PET polyester, the same material from which plastic beverage
14containers are made.
15(e) Existing law and current policies do not recognize the
16
existence of a new process that converts mixed plastic, textile, and
17fiber wastes in a closed loop directly to high-grade gasoline,
18kerosene, and diesel fuel with zero gaseous, liquid, or solid
19emissions, or that this process also consumes currently stockpiled
20refinery wastes, or is already being commercially developed by a
21major global oil corporation that has expressed interest in locating
22several such facilities in California.
Section 41780.01 of the Public Resources Code is
24amended to read:
(a) The Legislature hereby declares that it is the
26policy goal of the state that not less than 75 percent of solid waste
27generated be source reduced, recycled,begin insert used for power generation
28in dedicated anaerobic digesters as well as in modern landfills
29capturing methane gas,end insert or composted by the year 2020, and
30annually thereafter.
31(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), the department shall not
32establish or enforce a diversion rate on a city or county that is
33greater than the 50 percent diversion rate established pursuant to
34Section 41780.
Section 41780.03 is added to the Public Resources
36Code, to read:
The department shall do all of the following:
38(a) Investigate emerging technologies that convert used plastic,
39textile, and fiber products into useful feedstocks and monomers.
P4 1(b) Adopt regulations and protocols by January 1, 2017, that
2encourage the further development of waste-to-energy and
3waste-to-fuel pyrolysis projects that address the various types and
4grades of plastic, textile, and fiber products, that at the time of the
5adoption of the regulations and protocols, are disposed of in
6 landfills.
7(c) Beginning January 1, 2017, and each January 1 thereafter,
8examine and report to the Legislature on possible incentives for
9locating
in-state, those businesses and organizations that practice
10state-of-the-art, cost-effective material separation and recovery
11techniques, as well as those organizations that are now
12commercially developing the most cost-effective conversion of
13mixed plastic, textile, and fiber wastes to fuels.
14(d) (1) The requirement for submitting a report to the
15Legislature under subdivision (c) is inoperative on January 1, 2020,
16pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.
17(2) A report to be submitted pursuant to subdivision (c) shall
18be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government
19Code.
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