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Is Our Bottle Recycling System Garbage?

Bay Curious

English - September 21, 2023 10:00 - 23 minutes - ★★★★★ - 4 ratings
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Have you ever looked at your grocery receipt and seen a charge that says "CRV" next to your canned soda or bottled beer? That stands for California Redemption Value, and it's supposed to be a $.05 or $.10 deposit that consumers can then get refunded when they recycle the beverage container. The problem is, most people never get their money back because... well, it's hard to find a place to trade them in. Reporter Steven Rascón follows the money to see what happens to all those nickels and dimes we don't get back, and how the state is trying to improve things.
Additional Reading:

Cashing In on the Future of California's Bottle Deposit System

Read the transcript for this episode

What Happens to San Francisco's Recycling Once It Leaves the Curb?

'You Can't Recycle Your Way Out': California's Plastic Problem and What We Can Do About It

How Does Oakland Turn Food Scraps to Soil?

California’s Plastic Problem | KQED Newsroom

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Enter our Sierra Nevada Brewing Company monthly trivia contest

Your support makes KQED podcasts possible. You can show your love by going to https://kqed.org/donate/podcasts
This story was reported by Steven Rascón. Bay Curious is made by Amanda Font, Christopher Beale, and me, Olivia-Allen Price. Additional support from Jen Chien, Katie Sprenger, Cesar Saldana, Maha Sanad and Holly Kernan.

Have you ever looked at your grocery receipt and seen a charge that says "CRV" next to your canned soda or bottled beer? That stands for California Redemption Value, and it's supposed to be a $.05 or $.10 deposit that consumers can then get refunded when they recycle the beverage container. The problem is, most people never get their money back because... well, it's hard to find a place to trade them in. Reporter Steven Rascón follows the money to see what happens to all those nickels and dimes we don't get back, and how the state is trying to improve things.

Additional Reading:


Cashing In on the Future of California's Bottle Deposit System
Read the transcript for this episode
What Happens to San Francisco's Recycling Once It Leaves the Curb?
'You Can't Recycle Your Way Out': California's Plastic Problem and What We Can Do About It
How Does Oakland Turn Food Scraps to Soil?
California’s Plastic Problem | KQED Newsroom
Sign up for our newsletter
Enter our Sierra Nevada Brewing Company monthly trivia contest


Your support makes KQED podcasts possible. You can show your love by going to https://kqed.org/donate/podcasts

This story was reported by Steven Rascón. Bay Curious is made by Amanda Font, Christopher Beale, and me, Olivia-Allen Price. Additional support from Jen Chien, Katie Sprenger, Cesar Saldana, Maha Sanad and Holly Kernan.