US consumers recycled cans at a slightly higher rate in 2023 than in 2022, but still below pre-Covid-19 levels.
Consumers recycled 43pc of their aluminum cans — about 46bn cans — in 2023, up from 42pc in 2022 but still down from 46pc in 2019. They threw away about 61bn cans, which would be worth about $1.2bn, according to a report from the Aluminum Association (AA) and the Can Manufacturers Institute (CMI).
US aluminum producers recycled 57pc of beverage can scrap in 2023, down from nearly 59pc the year before but up from 56pc in 2019.
The closed-loop circularity rate for aluminum cans, which measures what percentage of recycled beverage containers is used to make new beverage containers, rose to 97pc in 2023 from 93pc in 2021. US aluminum producers reported that average new beverage can is made up of 71pc recycled material, including 33pc used beverage can (UBC) scrap.
CMI members seek to achieve a total recycling rate of 70pc by 2030, 80pc by 2040, and 90pc by 2050. The CMI and AA are pushing for expanded access to deposit return systems (DRS), where consumers receive a small refund whenever they deposit UBCs in certain containers.
Consumers recycle 77pc of cans in states with a DRS compared with 36pc of cans in states without one. The two associations did not offer any timeline on any new state or nationwide DRS but did predict that national DRS coverage would increase the recycling rate by 48 percentage points.