Montreal

Quebec glass recycling plants to get $40M upgrade from business group

Éco Entreprises Québec, a Quebec non-profit representing businesses in the province, says it will invest $40 million over five years to help modernize the way glass is recycled in the province and keep more of it out of landfills.

Éco Entreprises Québec says improving centres best way to resolve glass recycling problem

Much of the glass in Quebec currently ends up in landfills, after a Longueuil facility that prepared the majority of the province's glass for recycling shut its doors in 2013. (Mead Gruver/AP file photo)

A Quebec non-profit representing businesses in the province says it will invest $40 million over five years to help modernize the way glass is recycled in the province.

Éco Entreprises Québec says upgrading recycling centres would make it easier to recycle glass collected at the curb.

"We've been analyzing this situation for the past years, and we came to the conclusion that the best way to have good recycling of glass material in Quebec is to modernize our sorting centers and to work on the market outlets for glass," Maryse Vermette, CEO of Éco Entreprises Québec, told CBC Montreal's Daybreak.

The proposal appears to be at odds with the bottle-deposit system the Quebec government is considering. Environmental activists have argued a deposit is the best way to ensure glass doesn't end up in the trash.

Currently, much of the glass left with curbside recycling ends up in landfills. A Longueuil facility that prepared about 70 per cent of Quebec's glass for recycling shut its doors in 2013.

Éco Entreprises Québec, which represents more than 3,000 companies that produce containers, packaging and printed material in Quebec, has looked at the situation and believes upgrading recycling centres is the best to resolve the problem, Vermette said.

The group's members already contribute $135 million each year to compensate for municipal curbside recycling services.