Recycling is often treated like a test of personal responsibility. Were the materials rinsed? Did the lid come off? Did the right bin get used? These questions are common, yet they overlook a larger truth.
Recycling works or fails because of infrastructure. The systems behind the scenes determine whether discarded materials become new products or landfill-bound waste. From the moment something is tossed into a bin to the point it becomes feedstock for a new package, recycling depends on collection, sorting, and conversion working together.
When even one part of this system breaks down, circularity grinds to a halt. That’s the challenge facing U.S. recycling today.