Pilot for curbside recycling of flexible packaging starts in the US
General Announcement
September 27, 2019The Materials Recovery for the Future (MRFF) research program, in which Amcor is a partner, has launched single-stream curbside recycling of flexible plastic packaging (FPP) in Pennsylvania, U.S.
The Materials Recovery for the Future (MRFF) research program, in which Amcor is a partner, has launched single-stream curbside recycling of flexible plastic packaging (FPP) in Pennsylvania, U.S.

The pilot, in the Borough of Pottstown, will demonstrate the technical and economic feasibility of recycling household FPP from municipal residential single-stream recycling programs. FPP – which includes films, wraps, bags and pouches – is not widely recycled today. As it becomes a larger part of the packaging waste stream, the need for scalable recycling collection strategies is critical to its sustainability.
The industry-sponsored program selected local waste company J. P. Mascaro & Sons to run the curbside recycling.
"An obvious benefit of this pilot is the enhancement of our ongoing waste recycling and reuse efforts, and it will further improve the sustainability of the waste service system that we have developed over the years at J. P. Mascaro & Sons," said Company President, Pat Mascaro.
Alongside Amcor, MRFF members include The Procter & Gamble Company, Target, The Dow Chemical Company, PepsiCo, Nestlé USA, Nestlé Purina PetCare, Amcor, The Walmart Foundation, KraftHeinz, and the American Chemistry Council, and many others.
“By partnering with J.P. Mascaro and Sons, we’re creating a ‘living lab’ for flexible packaging recovery. Resident participation is the next step in our research journey as we discover the best ways to fully integrate flexible plastic packaging into the recycling system," said Steve Sikra, director of sustainability for Procter & Gamble.
According to Resource Recycling Systems (RRS) the recycling system consultancy that conducts the MRFF research program, 12 billion pounds of FPP material is introduced into the market for consumer use every year, and it is the fastest growing form of packaging.
“People want to be able to recycle flexible packaging, and today that becomes possible for residents in Pottstown. The impact of this program is far larger than one community – the results will inform advances in recycling systems across the country. Amcor was the first packaging company to pledge to develop all our packaging to be recyclable or reusable by 2025, and this project will help that happen in practice,” said Fabio Peyer, sustainability director and Amcor’s representative to the MRFF Program.
The pilot will generate important data to show interested municipalities in the U.S. that FPP recycling is possible and economical, and that there is a market for the rFlex end-product.
"By recycling clean, dry, and empty flexible packaging, Pottstown residents will help demonstrate a model of how a wider variety of packaging can be recycled into high-quality products,” said Susan Graff, vice president of Global Corporate Sustainability for RRS.
About Amcor
Amcor is a global leader in developing and producing responsible packaging for food, beverage, pharmaceutical, medical, home- and personal-care, and other products. Amcor works with leading companies around the world to protect their products and the people who rely on them, differentiate brands, and improve value chains through a range of flexible and rigid packaging, specialty cartons, closures, and services. The company is focused on making packaging that is increasingly light-weighted, recyclable and reusable, and made using a rising amount of recycled content. Around 50,000 Amcor people generate US$13 billion in sales from operations that span about 250 locations in 40-plus countries. NYSE: AMCR; ASX: AMC
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