Big beverage companies plan to charge recycling fees in Ontario. Will stores pass the cost on to you?
CBC
Companies are poised to start charging recycling fees for non-alcoholic beverages in Ontario following an earlier threat from the province's environment minister to block the charges.
What's not clear is whether consumers will see those fees tacked on at the checkout or buried within the price of the soft drinks, bottled water and juice boxes they buy.
Ontario is shifting toward making the companies that produce consumer goods responsible for the cost of recovering or recycling their waste material.
The industry organization that represents the major beverage producers, the Canadian Beverage Container Recycling Association (CBCRA), is responding to the shift by choosing to impose fees of one to three cents on each bottle, can, carton or drink box sold in Ontario, starting June 1.
Environment Minister David Piccini said during a news conference in April that he would stop the beverage industry from charging the fees. However, there's nothing in existing legislation that gives him the power to do so.
Piccini is now walking back the comment and instead of banning the fees, is merely urging the producers not to make consumers pay them.
"Ultimately, it is our expectation that these large beverage producers pay for the cost of recycling and not impose any new fees on consumers," said Piccini's spokesman, Daniel Strauss, in an email to CBC News.
"It's our expectation that producers are able to mitigate any additional costs on consumers by leveraging their extensive experience in operating similar programs in other jurisdictions while utilizing new technology and innovation available to them," said Strauss.
The producers' association, which includes such major industry players as Coca Cola, PepsiCo and Refresco, has estimated it will collect some $80 million per year in Ontario from the fees.
The association says the fees will help fund 250,000 recycling bins in locations across the province as well as awareness campaigns to boost recycling.
"We continue to engage with government and appreciate their support in implementing a beverage container recycling program that will support the industry in achieving the ambitious targets set out under regulation," said Ken Friesen, CBCRA's executive director, in an email to CBC News.
The provincial government has mandated that the industry recover 80 per cent of all beverage containers by 2030. A consultant's report found just 46 per cent of non-alcoholic drink containers were diverted from landfills in Ontario in 2019.
The CBCRA has been running a similar program since 2011 in Manitoba, where 72 per cent of all beverage containers are now recovered, up from 42 per cent when the program began. In that province, customers are charged a two-cent recycling fee on each sealed beverage container purchase.
That program's financial statements show it collected $10.2 million in fees in 2021 in Manitoba, which has roughly one-tenth the population of Ontario.