The suffering endured on the Eastern Shore due to the covid-19 pandemic has included economic pain. But, as many businesses closed or made irksome changes, one enterprise gave signs of health — residential recycling.
From Betterton in the north down to Caroline County, Shore residents kept up their environmentally-helpful habits and gave a boost to private and governmental recycling programs.
The major uptick came in collections of cardboard, up by 50 percent in one month for one operator.
“People are buying online stuff they used to go to a store for — everything, coffee beans, clothes, anything,” said Ford Schumann, director of Infinity Recycling, Inc. of Millington. His non-profit firm collects reusable discards for four towns — Chestertown and Betterton in Kent, Hillsboro in Caroline, and Queen Anne in Talbot. It also serves individual clients.
With many purchases arriving in boxes, there was more cardboard to set out in Infinity’s plastic totes. Schumann did not have precise figures on Infinity’s increase, but the Maryland Environmental Service (MES) did. That quasi-governmental agency, which operates 38 drop-off locations for recyclables in four mid-Shore counties, reported a 23 percent increase for April and a 50 percent increase in May for cardboard, compared to the same months in 2019.
The surge in collected cardboard came at an opportune time. With high demand by box manufacturers, the material’s value also jumped. Prices for OCC (trade term for old corrugated cardboard) rose 46 percent in May, the trade journal Resource Recycling reported in its May 19 online newsletter.
The ton of OCC that had earned $73 in April earned $107 in May, the journal said. Melissa Filiaggi, recycling manager for MES, reported the metal bins at Midshore Regional Recycling Program sites bulged with 185,860 pounds of cardboard in May, which produced 93 tons of the material. The sites are in Queen Anne’s, Caroline, Talbot, and Kent counties.
Ms. Filiaggi wrote in an email that “significantly risen prices” were a welcome upside to the challenges of the pandemic.
Infinity Recycling will also enjoy the higher revenues. Schumann said his firm’s modest volumes do not give it power to negotiate prices with commodity brokers, but that values are generally standard across the industry.
“We’ll see that increase,” said Jennifer Stafford, Infinity’s office manager.
Across the Bay, there were similar reports.
Richard Bowen, manager of recycling and waste reduction for Anne Arundel County, said the weights of both cardboard and mixed papers increased about 5 percent in April and 6 percent in May over the previous year. This was especially good news for the county in view of the fact that the two products account for 48 percent of total collection weights. And, with most of Anne Arundel’s 165,000 single-family households contributing to curbside recycling, the uptick in revenues was meaningful.
All of Anne Arundel’s collections go to Recycle America in Elkridge, owned by the giant Waste Management, Inc. The recovery center usually charges the county $12 per ton for sorting, baling and transporting the end-products to the buyers. “With the higher prices for mixed papers and cardboard, we’ll pay only $9.56 per ton instead,” Bowen said.
The official added that the county never planned its volunteer recycling program as a profit-making venture. “But it is cheaper than the $45 per ton for disposal (in landfills). Plus there’s less wasted resources and less harm to the environment.”
Linda G. Weimer
retired from fulltime news reporting in 2009 after three years with the Sun Media Group's suburban Baltimore weeklies. As a freelancer, her work has appeared in more than a dozen regional and national publications, including
The Washington Post, Sierra Magazine, Seafood Leader, and The New York Times
.