It was more than a year after the seabird died and washed up on a California beach before Jessie Beck prepared to reveal its last meals.
Holding its stomach over a laboratory sink, Beck snipped open the slick tissue. With a series of plinks, the stomach contents slumped out onto the metal sieve below.
Inside were the remains of seabird food, like hooked squid beaks the size of fingernail clippings. Mostly, though, Beck found hard shards of plastic, soggy cardboard, styrofoam and a maroon hunk of mystery meat that looked like beef jerkyโuntil Beck cracked it open. Its innards were pure white: more styrofoam.
The gray bird, called a northern fulmar, may have died in the waters off California during its winter migration. And itโs possible that the birdโs garbage-filled meals played a part in its death. But Beck, a scientist with the nonprofit group Oikonos Ecosystem Knowledge, isnโt one to speculate, and she isnโt investigating what killed it.
Instead, the bird is part of a larger project to monitor plastic pollution, 4 to 12 million metric tons of which wash into the ocean around the world every year. Fulmars are known to snack on this trash, particularly when theyโre hungry. And when they die and wash up on shore, about 70 percent of them bring some plastic back with them every year.
Looking in these birdsโ guts is how Beck studies the plastic bobbing on the oceanโs surface and tempting hungry animals. That plastic and cardboard crowding out the squid beaks and seaweed in the dead birdโs stomach are a sign of a global garbage crisis that California hasnโt escaped.
Too Much Trash
Californians generated about 77.2 million tons of waste in 2017, according to the most recent calculations from CalRecycle, Californiaโs Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery. Of that, about 44.4 million tons ended up in landfills in 2017. CalRecycle estimates that the other 32.8 million tons, about 42 percent, was sent to recycling or composting, or was just never tossed in the first place.
The numbers are a problem, because they mean the state is far from reaching a statewide goal to reduce, recycle, or compost 75 percent of waste by the year 2020. And the outlook isnโt goodโin part because cheap natural gas is spurring investments in the manufacturing of virgin plastics, which a CalRecycle report said could โundermine source reduction efforts, undercut prices for recovered plastics, and exacerbate plastic litter and marine pollution issues.โ
Thereโs also been a major shakeup in the international recycling markets, which affects California because it exports about a third of its recycling, according to CalRecycle estimates. Historically, the bulk of Californiaโs recycling exports went to China. But in 2013, China temporarily scaled up inspection and enforcement against imports of contaminated recycling. And in 2017, China announced new restrictions on imports and tighter contamination standards for materials including mixed plastics and unsorted paper.
โThat started sending recyclers and recycling markets into a tailspin here,โ said Kate OโNeill, an associate professor in environmental science at the University of California, Berkeley, and an expert on the international waste trade. Since then, countries including Thailand, Vietnam, and India announced plans to ban scrap plastic.
OโNeill, for one, hasnโt lost hope. โWaste is a challenge we can meet,โ she said. She hopes the race to find a plastic substitute will take off, and that manufacturers will cut back packaging on consumer goods. But any systemic change, she knows, will take time.
โYouโre talking about slowing down and stopping the Titanic,โ she said.
In the meantime, recyclers and local governments across the state are struggling to cope with a rapidly changing market for recyclables. And theyโre trying not to undo the decades of work that made consumer recycling a habit.
Disappearing Markets
The upheaval in recycling markets means plastic and, especially, paper are piling up for recyclers like Richard Caglia, corporate development officer for Caglia Environmental companies, including the Cedar Avenue Recycling and Transfer Station in Fresno.
โThe market is in a state of flux,โ Caglia said, and weathering it has meant raising rates for some of the recycling haulers and cities they work with, including Fresno. โSo far, weโve been very fortunate to survive it.โ
The Cedar Avenue facility accepts about half of Fresnoโs residential recycling, as well as recycling from surrounding areas. Cagliaโs trying to find someone who wants to pay for his bales of mixed paper. Right now, he has roughly 4.2 million pounds of it stockpiled, and that has Caglia worried about fires. Central Valley summers are hot, and every so often, people toss something that could spark a fireโlike lithium ion batteriesโinto their recycling.
โEven though we try to keep our materials spread out as far as possible, itโs the nature of the businessโsomething could go wrong anytime,โ he said. โWe actually have 24-hour security now doing nothing but fire watch.โ
In spite of the shakeup, the city of Fresno hasnโt raised its garbage fees or changed which recyclables it collects from residentsโat least not yet, according to Alicia Real, recycling coordinator for the City of Fresno. โWeโre at that tipping point right now,โ Real said.
For now, though, Real said itโs the non-recyclables people really need to stop tossing in the blue bin, things like dirty diapers, garden hoses, clothing, styrofoam and kiddie pools. Thatโs why Fresno is running a โKeep Fresno Cleanโ campaign. Its webpage is headlined by a woman clutching a garden hose and a man holding a diaper sporting a smiling poop emoji.
The goal is to curb what Real calls wish-recycling. โMost people are trying to do the right thing,โ she said. โThey look at a product and say, โOh, this is made from half-plastic and half-metal; this should be recyclable,โ and so they throw it into the container.โ
Caglia appreciates the effort but thinks more work is needed. Garden hoses are a particular nightmare.
โPowerful machinery has a tendency to wind things up pretty tight,โ Caglia said, and the whole plant can come to a standstill as a wayward hose needs to be cut loose.
Culver City is in a similar predicament. Once, it could sell off its recycling for about $25 per ton, according to Kim Braun, the manager of environmental programs and operations in the public works department. But now, recyclers are having a difficult time finding buyers for most of the cityโs plastics, except for beverage bottles and detergent containers.
As for yogurt cups, plastic packaging, laundry hampers and plastic clamshells, Braun said that those types of mixed plastics will end up in a landfill one way or another, no matter what residents do.
โTheyโre going to put it in the can to go to the landfill at the front end, or the processor is going to put it in the landfill at the backend,โ she said.
These days, Braun estimated, Culver City has to pay about $25 per ton to get processors to take its curbside recycling off its hands. While rates havenโt increased yet for residents, she said to expect new, higher fees in July 2020. Still, Braun hasnโt changed what Culver City picks up at the curb in response to the international recycling shakeup. She doesnโt want city residents to have lost the habit by the time the markets, she hopes, recover. โPeople are confused enough as it is,โ she said.
The Problem With Wish-Cycling
Keeping trash out of the blue bin has become a matter of survival for companies like San Jose-based GreenWaste Recovery, which collects and processes trash, recycling and yard waste from parts of the Bay Area and Central Coast. In a recent stark example, one glitching computer temporarily closed off an entire market for recycled materials, leaving even fewer options for buyers.
On a sunny summer day, crushed glass glittered on the ground as the facilityโs manager, Ricardo Lopez, gestured at what looked like a mountain of trash. โThis is the โrecycling,โโ Lopez said. Rolled up carpet, an oven mitt, pizza boxes and dirt littered the pile. An empty propane tank lay on its side nearby. All of that trash will have to be removed before the good stuffโempty plastic bottles and jugs, glass, aluminum cans and clean paper and cardboardโcan be baled and sold.
โTheyโre giving me a bunch of crap on the front end, so it makes it that much harder to process it,โ he said.
GreenWaste has invested more than $10 million over the past two years, including on new sorting machines and staffing to weed through all that junk. As the recycling moves through the processing facility, its first stop is a machine that spreads it evenly on a conveyor belt so employees donโt have to dig to pick out what doesnโt belong. A car mat, a jug with car oil in it, and a giant sack that once held โWild Potatoesโ all ended up on this pile.
Then the recycling travels through a series of screens to separate out cardboard and glass before it hits an automated sorting machine that pulls out garbage like latex gloves and diapers. After a pass through yet more screens and automated sorting machines, employees pick through the final paper and plastic streams on conveyor belts to remove any contaminants that snuck through.
This particular day, there was more to worry about than usual: The automated sorting machine wasnโt working. That meant those manually sorting the recycling had to pay more attention to stray diapers, and couldnโt keep as much cardboard out of the paper bales as they usually do.
The result? Lopez had to tell his broker not to sell any bales to Indonesiaโwhich has made headlines for sending back contaminated recyclingโuntil they fixed the problem.
โThat one layer of missing quality control has completely changed the makeup of my product,โ Lopez said. โThatโs why I told the buyer, โHey, listen, I canโt make your spec, so letโs wait on shipment until I have my machine up and running.โ Thatโs how delicate the situation is now.โ
Is Recycling Correctly Good Enough?
Tossing a container into the bin doesnโt guarantee a buyer even when Lopezโs machines are working perfectly. He points to the black plastic containers for rotisserie chicken from the grocery store with a number โ1โ stamped onto the bottom.
โThereโs zero market,โ he said. โJust because it has a number does not mean that itโs recyclable or that there is a current market.โ
He blames marketing spin from the packaging industry. โBut they wouldnโt be selling this if (we), as consumers, werenโt demanding it.โ
Are consumers demanding it, though? Not Beck, who, even as a scientist with her hands in the guts of the problem, canโt avoid making plastic waste. As she scrubbed down the industrial cutting board the birds rested on during their necropsies, she revealed what is more discouraging than all the plastic trapped in the birdsโ downy gray carcasses.
โItโs more demoralizing to go to the market and be like, โOh, if I want to buy anything, itโs going to be a plastic,โโ she said over the cutting board.
Around the lab were signs that Beck and her fellow scientists are trying to shrink their garbage footprint. Used and washed zip bags hung on a wooden dowel to dry. In the musty cold room from which Beckโs colleague wheeled out the cart of bird carcasses, a huge bucket overflowed with crumpled, soiled purple gloves they plan to send back to the glove company for recycling.
But going to the store is just a reminder of the scale of the plastics crisis. โIโm going to have to contribute to the problemโjust by participating in the normal economy.โ
CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.
