04/22/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/22/2026 12:19
(April 22, 2026 - Washington, D.C.) - The Recycled Materials Association (ReMA) has released a new Economic Impact Studyopens in a new tab on Earth Day, underscoring the essential role recycled materials play in powering American manufacturing, strengthening supply chains, and advancing environmental sustainability.
The study, conducted independently by John Dunham & Associates, measures the industry's full footprint across the U.S. economy - from direct operations at recycling businesses to the supplier industries they depend on and the communities where their workers live and spend. The report finds:
Far from being a niche environmental activity, recycling is a core industrial input. ReMA's more than 1,700 member companies provide high-quality recycled materials manufacturers rely on to produce everything from infrastructure and vehicles to consumer goods and advanced energy technologies.
"Recycling is where environmental responsibility and economic strength come together," said ReMA President Robin Wiener. "Our industry is the backbone of American manufacturing. It's hard to get through Earth Day - or any day - without using a product made with recycled material."
Recycled materials are foundational across key U.S. manufacturing sectors:
The environmental benefits are equally significant. Compared to producing from natural resources, manufacturing with recycled materials can reduce energy consumption by up to 90 percent and greenhouse gas emissions by up to 96 percent, helping manufacturers lower costs while shrinking their environmental footprint.
From the bridges we drive on to the boxes that deliver packages, recycled materials are embedded in everyday life. By keeping materials in use, the industry reduces the need for new mining, drilling, and logging - protecting forests, rivers, and wildlife habitat.
The industry continues to grow through innovation, with companies investing in advanced sorting technologies and artificial intelligence to recover more material, improve quality, and meet rising demand from manufacturers. The structural shifts defining the next decade - electrification, data center growth, grid modernization, and reshoring - all run through recycled materials, positioning the industry at the center of America's next era of manufacturing.
"On Earth Day, the focus is often on what we can conserve," Wiener added. "But recycling is also about what we can build: stronger supply chains, resilient communities, and a more sustainable manufacturing future."
Explore the full report and state-level data at https://www.recycledmaterials.org/our-impact/opens in a new tab.
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For more information contact: Rachel Bookman, [email protected] in a new tab.
The Recycled Materials Association (ReMA) represents more than 1,700 companies in the U.S. and 40 countries around the globe. Based in Washington, D.C., ReMA provides advocacy, education, safety and compliance training, and promotes public awareness of the vital role recycled materials play in the U.S. economy, global trade, the environment and sustainable development.