
Policy Position
Advanced Recycling: Strenghtening U.S. Recycling and Manufacturing
America’s Plastic Makers® support recognizing advanced recycling as a manufacturing process and as a source of recycled content that counts toward plastics recycling rates and recycled-content goals. Because advanced recycling transforms used plastics into the building blocks for new plastics, not into waste, these facilities should be regulated as manufacturing rather than solid waste operations.
Advanced recycling technologies use chemistry to break plastics down at the molecular level, allowing mixed, layered, and hard-to-recycle plastics to be processed into new, high-quality plastics, including materials suitable for food, medical, and pharmaceutical applications. These technologies can help keep valuable materials out of landfills and in the U.S. economy, strengthening domestic supply chains and increasing access to recycled plastics for American manufacturers.
How Advanced Recycling Supports U.S. Recycling Goals and Sustainability
Advanced recycling can significantly expand the amount and types of plastics the U.S. is able to recycle today. By converting plastics that are not commonly recycled at scale into new raw materials, these technologies help increase plastic recycling rates and support state, federal, and company recycled-content goals.
Advanced recycling can also reduce the use of virgin resources and lower greenhouse gas emissions compared to conventional production of certain plastics. Studies show that advanced recycling facilities have air emissions similar to other light-manufacturing operations, including medical centers and universities. Importantly, advanced recycling does not involve incineration or burning of plastics.

Importantly, advanced recycling does not involve incineration or burning of plastics.
Learn more about advanced recycling.
Smart Public Policies Can Help Meet Recycling Goals
Public policies on advanced recycling for plastic at the local, state, federal and international levels should embrace the following two principles.
1. Advanced Recycling = Recycling
Plastic produced through advanced recycling should be recognized in law and regulation as recycled plastic. This classification ensures advanced recycling contributes to:
- State and federal plastics recycling targets
- Recycled-content goals and mandates
- Recycling requirements within extended producer responsibility (EPR) programs
Plastic products derived from advanced or mechanical recycling should count equally toward recycled-content requirements. Independent certification systems should be used to verify and report recycled plastic use, including through the use of mass balance accounting where appropriate.
Federal agencies have important roles:
- FTC should expressly recognize verifiable recycled-content claims for plastics made through advanced recycling.
- FDA should support appropriate clearances for food-contact applications.
- Products made using advanced recycling that are marketed as fuels should not count as recycled.
2. Advanced Recycling = Manufacturing
Advanced recycling facilities turn used plastics into new materials and should be regulated as manufacturing, not solid waste incineration. Treating these facilities as manufacturing:
- Provides appropriate environmental and safety oversight
- Ensures siting and permitting consistency with similar industrial facilities
- Strengthens U.S. competitiveness by expanding domestic production of recycled plastics
- Supports a circular economy by keeping materials in use rather than discarding them
- Will help scale new recycling technologies, modernize U.S. recycling infrastructure, and expand access to high-quality recycled plastics.
Advanced Recycling Helps Build a Circular Economy
Advanced recycling can help significantly increase U.S. plastic recycling rates by expanding what can be collected, processed, and remade. By keeping used plastics in circulation and supporting the production of high-quality recycled plastics, advancing recycling is an essential tool for reducing plastic waste, improving U.S. sustainability, strengthening U.S. manufacturing and accelerating a circular economy, globally.
RELATED RESOURCES

-
Episode 54
Recycling’s Big Year and Even Bigger Future with Ross Eisenberg
Ross Eisenberg, President of America’s Plastic MakersIn this episode of Sustainably Speaking, host Mia Quinn welcomes back Ross Eisenberg, President of America’s Plastic Makers™, for a wide-ranging conversation on why recycling is no longer just an environmental issue—it’s an economic and manufacturing opportunity hiding in plain sight.
-
Episode 52
Designing More Recyclable Vehicles with Hyundai’s Amanda Nummy
Amanda Nummy, Senior Polymer Materials Engineer, Hyundai Motor CompanyWhat it takes to build a vehicle that’s more recyclable from the start
-
Episode 50
AI-Powered Recycling
Pieter Van Dijk, President, Van Dyk Recycling Solutions, Haley Lowry, Head of Sustainability, DOW, and Ambarish Mitra, Co-Founder, GreyparrotWhat if recycling plants facilities had better brains? In this episode, recorded live at SXSW, Mia Quinn sits down with leaders from Van Dyk Recycling Solutions, Dow, and Greyparrot to unpack how artificial intelligence is transforming the recycling industry. From sorting technology that sees what we humans miss to real-time data that powers better packaging design and policy, this is a conversation about what's working, what's broken—and what's next.
