MILLER BREWING COMPANY'S NEW PLASTIC BEER 
BOTTLE JEOPARDIZES PLASTICS RECYCLING
LOS ANGELES, CA (January 21, 1999) -- The 
Miller Brewing Company's new plastic beer 
bottle being test marketed in Los Angeles 
and five other markets could devastate 
plastics recycling, public officials and the 
GrassRoots Recycling Network said today.  
Miller is the first brewer to introduce a 
plastic beer bottle in the U.S.  
Los Angeles City Councilwoman Ruth 
Galanter announced at a noon press 
conference today in the Council Press Room 
behind Room 300 in City Hall that she will 
introduce a resolution Friday.  The 
resolution for action by the City Council 
calls on Miller to take responsibility for 
making its new package compatible with the 
City's recycling program before introducing 
it more widely.  Officials from the City of 
Madison WI, and the City of San Diego CA, 
are also contacting Miller to urge the 
company to address the bottle's negative 
impacts on recycling before it is introduced 
nationally. 
"Miller's plastic beer bottle jeopardizes 
plastics recycling in Los Angeles and across 
the country," Rick Best, chair of the 
GrassRoots Recycling Network (GRRN) and 
policy director of Californians Against 
Waste, said.  "Miller's actions make it 
clear that the environment and recycling are 
taking a back seat to marketing 
considerations." 
"Miller must make sure its bottle is 
compatible with our recycling systems, 
before it is introduced nationally," Best 
said. 
The GrassRoots Recycling Network called on 
Miller Brewing Company today to make the 
following commitments before rolling out the 
bottle nationwide:
* Ensure that the Miller bottle is 
compatible with current PET recycling.
* Ensure that the Miller bottle will not 
increase recycling costs for local 
governments and recyclers. 
* Use at least 25 percent recycled content 
in all bottles.
"Plastics recycling is in a downward 
spiral," George Dreckmann, recycling 
coordinator for the City of Madison, 
Wisconsin, said.  "Miller's bottle will only 
make things worse, unless the company takes 
responsibility for its new bottle." 
"Miller should buy back its used plastic 
beer bottles at a price that covers the cost 
of processing them," Dreckmann said. "Miller 
should also help research and develop 
recycling systems to handle its new bottle 
and incorporate recycled content into the 
bottles themselves."
"The Miller plastic beer bottle's amber 
tint, new interior barrier material, and 
metal cap and label make it incompatible 
with today's plastics recycling stream," 
Best said. Best explained that these 
elements increase costs for plastics 
recycling and cause such serious 
contamination that recyclers who handle the 
Miller bottle will not be able to sell their 
reclaimed plastic to high value markets. 
Since most plastics recyclers are struggling 
already, this combination of increased costs 
and lost revenues could literally drive them 
out of business.  
"It will be local governments and 
taxpayers who pay the higher costs for 
recycling or disposing of unmarketable 
material," Best said.
###
A 4-page Fact Sheet on the Miller Plastic 
Beer Bottle is on the GrassRoots Recycling 
Network's web site at http://www.grrn.org 
under WasteMakers.
CONTACTS:
Bill Sheehan  (706) 613-7121 (GrassRoots Recycling Network)
Rick Best  (916) 443-5422  (GrassRoots Recycling Network)
Resa Dimino  (718) 885-9093  (GrassRoots Recycling Network)
Niki Tenant  (213) 485-3357  (Galanter)