Posted on Wednesday, November 5, 2025
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by Outside Contributor
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Welcome to the economic future of the United States: Big Tech, Big Data — and Big… Recycling?
That’s the conclusion of a new analysis from the American Chemistry Council (ACC), which says that if America dominates the coming advanced recycling industry the same way it has dominated technology, the results could be billions in new economic activity and tens of thousands of jobs.
The technology needed for the advanced recycling revolution is here, says ACC President Ross Eisenberg. What’s needed is a new mindset.
“Recycling is really manufacturing.” Instead of looking at used plastics as a problem to be solved, he says, they should be seen as a resource to be monetized.
That can’t happen at most of the 245 plastic recycling facilities across the U.S., which use mechanical recycling processes that involve sorting, cleaning, shredding, melting, and remolding plastic.
“Mechanical recycling is tried and true,” Eisenberg says, but it can’t handle many of the most common forms of plastic. “The films, the pouches, the tubes, the synthetic textiles — they still end up in landfills because the existing recycling infrastructure we have here in the U.S. just can’t handle them.”
That’s where advanced recycling comes in. Unlike mechanical recycling, advanced recycling turns plastics into a gas or liquid raw material — “reducing them back to molecules,” Eisenberg says — which can then be turned into “brand-new plastics for use in virtually any product or packaging type, including food- and pharmaceutical-grade plastics.”
Similar to the way the mining industry supplies raw materials that are turned into consumer products, recycling plastic into its raw form can supply industry with raw materials while removing massive amounts of plastic from the waste stream.
The private sector has embraced the concept, with billions of dollars being invested into advanced recycling technology, according to ACC.
And a Government Accountability Office report from 2021 also touted the technology.
“Chemical recycling can produce raw materials of virgin quality, thereby decreasing demand for fossil fuels and other natural resources,” the report states. “Developing advanced recycling technologies could promote domestic business and employment. Chemical recycling creates a market for plastic waste and a new way to reuse some plastics.”
The ACC analysis suggests that widespread use of advanced recycling would create 173,200 new jobs with a total annual payroll of $12.8 billion. It could also add $48.7 billion in total economic output — the combined value of goods and services produced directly and indirectly as a result. “Essentially the same economic contributions annually of the milk industry in the United States,” Eisenberg said.
The challenge is no longer technology, but regulation, Eisenberg says. Calling the current political landscape a “plethora of regulatory barriers,” he urged state and federal governments to consider the advanced recycling of plastics as manufacturing instead of waste incineration. Any plastic made through the process would remain under recycling regulations.
“We think that would really help unlock some of the private investment that has been waiting to go,” he said.
The ACC is calling for a consistent national framework with clear standards, funding, incentives, infrastructure build-up, and public education. Eisenberg said those standards would help with the recycling process and recycled materials, along with waste reduction.
The plastics industry still faces plenty of skepticism from environmental groups and some lawmakers. Organizations like Greenpeace USA have claimed very little plastic is being recycled, and the World Wildlife Fund has called for a ban on single-use plastic cups and cutlery by the end of the year. More than 500 cities have banned single-use plastic bags in the U.S., and a dozen states have done the same.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data show about 32 percent of disposable items are recycled each year. Raising that rate to the EPA’s goal of 50 percent by 2030 will require major changes in how plastics are processed.
Eisenberg says critics are stuck in the past, telling InsideSources the plastics industry has changed. Plastic products are now designed with “end of life” in mind before production even begins. It’s an approach that, with new technology, can promote both recycling and the economy.
“Obviously, there’s an environmental component to this,” Eisenberg says. “We want to clean up the environment. But there’s also a jobs component to this, and we don’t want that to be ignored.”
Taylor Millard writes about politics and public policy.
Reprinted with Permission from DC Journal – By Taylor Millard
The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of AMAC or AMAC Action.
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