CIRCULAR DEBATE — How do you know when something is a solution or a problem? Oil and chemical companies are investing in a technology to melt down plastic back into its chemical components, arguing that it can help address the country's plastics crisis. Twenty states — all but one of them with Republican-led legislatures — have adopted rules favorable to chemical recycling since 2017, as our Jordan Wolman reports. Only eight facilities are in operation nationwide, but more than 40 companies are getting into the game, including Dow, Shell, Total Energies and Chevron Phillips. The American Chemistry Council envisions 150 plants around the country, heating up old plastic and selling the feedstock back to plastics manufacturers. The idea is that these plants will boost the value of recycled plastic, helping to increase recycling rates and reduce the amount of waste dumped in landfills and polluting the world’s waterways. Environmental groups aren't having it. They argue that the pollutants released by the process — including toxic chemicals like benzene, mercury and arsenic — are dangerous enough to negate any potential benefits. ACC wants to push further, including in Congress. A contingent of House Democrats is trying to stop them. The fight is focused on EPA, where regulators have been considering a rule for over a year but haven't said when they plan to release it. "We are in the EPA’s face on this,” said Teresa Mills, executive director of Ohio’s Buckeye Environmental Network and a community organizer with the Center for Health and Environmental Justice. The battle is also still in the states, where regulators trying to move faster than the feds are being pulled between the two poles. "It's clear that chemical recycling is one of the issues that we are going to have to deal with,” Tom Metzner , an environmental analyst at the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, said at a forum last month. “We will see where the technology goes. The way we envision it, the stewardship organization that proposes chemical recycling, they will have to prove that that is the better environmental outcome."
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