- no-single-use
- producer
- labeling
- no-pfas
California became the first state to enact legislation imposing a statewide ban on single-use plastic bags at large retail stores, and requires a 10-cent minimum charge for recycled paper bags, reusable plastic bags, and compostable bags at certain locations.
Sustainable foodservice packaging for CA State owned or operated buildings: CA SB1335 has led to the creation of a sustainable packaging database managed by CalRecycle, which includes third-party certified and PFAS-free molded fiber packaging. This means state-owned facilities like universities, the public school system, correctional facilities, airports, etc., can only purchase packaging on this list. Find approved products in the purchasing guide here.
Skip The Stuff Law: CA AB 1276 prohibits food facilities and third-party food platforms from providing single-use foodware accessories (i.e. cutlery, chopsticks, straws, etc.) or condiments to a customer, unless requested. The bill also specifically bans bundling or packaging accessories.
Considered the toughest bill on plastics to date, SB 54 requires 100% of packaging to be recyclable or compostable by 2032 and packaging makers help pay for the cost of recycling and composting packaging waste.
Assembly Bill (AB) 1200 bans all plant fiber-based food packaging containing PFASs that are either intentionally added or present at levels exceeding 100 parts per million of total fluorine, beginning January 1, 2023.
CA SB 343 restricts how marketers can use environmental marketing claims on packaging. The legislation also restricts the chasing arrows symbol for resin codes. Per the bill, compostable consumer products need to be PFAS-free, be labeled in a manner that distinguishes them from non compostable products, and compostable plastics meet ASTM standards D6400 or D6868.