Getting the Price Right
A study of a decade’s worth of recovered paper pricing trends reveals that a few grades have received "upgrades" and that the world has become a smaller place.
In a seminar presented at the Paper Recycling Conference & Trade Show in late June in Atlanta, consultant Bill Moore of Moore & Associates (www.MARecycle.com) of Atlanta offered an overview of historical scrap paper pricing that identified several trends.
For the past two years, scrap paper prices (using old corrugated containers, or OCC, as the benchmark grade) in Europe and North America have moved up and down largely in coordination. "There are a [now] lot of similarities there; 15 or 20 years ago that would not have been the case," Moore remarked.
The tandem movement of the two markets is considered to be a sign that demand from flourishing new mill capacity in China is driving the supply-and-demand equation for scrap paper equally in Europe and North America.
Another grade that has fared well in recent years is mixed paper, which has had an upward arcing average since 1996, gaining ground on the relatively flat pricing of the sorted office paper (SOP) grade.
Again, China is seen as a key factor in this equation, as its mills are accepting mixed paper to supplement OCC and other grades that can at times be more difficult to procure.
Factors that will affect pricing in the near future, Moore says, include North America’s, Europe’s and Asia’s ability to recover more scrap paper and the operating rates of North American paper mills, which are finally beginning to move back up after experiencing a steady decline the past five years.
For a look at other trends, Moore advised attendees to consider his company’s "Globalising Recovered Fibre Markets" report, available through the www.globalrecyclefiber.com Web site.
(Additional news about paper recycling markets is available online at www.RecyclingToday.com.)

Explore the August 2004 Issue
Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read.
Latest from Recycling Today
- Buy Scrap Software to showcase its software at Scrap Expo in September
- LG details recycling activities
- Algoma EAF is up and running
- Toyota-Tsusho completes acquisition of Radius Recycling
- CATL, Ellen MacArthur Foundation aim to accelerate circular battery economy
- Commentary: Expanded polystyrene is 98 percent air, 2 percent plastic and 100 percent misunderstood
- AMCS appoints general manager for North America
- How tariffs, regulations affect LIBs recycling in US, EU