hobo finds wrote:.80 today in So. AZ
I know this has been discussed before but I can't remember the answer - Why such high prices for AZ cans? It appears that Arizona was not a can deposit state (see below). From my experience of watching the market, refining/recycling impure metals usually means a buy back 10-15% below the spot price to cover costs of the refiner and the middle man (Aluminum is usually about 2 times this rate because of the gouging by the middleman). So these prices in AZ don't really make sense to me without a subsidy (Al spot at $.837). My vote is that the states listed below should refrain from posting on this thread because it doesn't help to see artificial prices unless there were a legal option to cash out in that state from another non-deposit state, which isn't the case.
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States that have a can deposit regulation:
Connecticut (0.05 US$), introduced 1980
Delaware (0.05 US$), introduced 1982, abolished 2009, replaced by Universal Recycling law.
Hawaii (0.05 US$), introduced 2005
Iowa (0.05 US$, incl. wine bottles), introduced 1979
California (0.05 US$, 0.10 US$ for bottles above 24 fl oz [almost 710 ml]), introduced 1987, 25% raise in 2007
Maine (0.05 US$), introduced 1978
Massachusetts (0.05 US$), introduced 1983
Michigan (0.10 US$), introduced 1978
New York (0.05 US$), introduced 1982
Oregon (0.05 US$), introduced 1972
Vermont (0.05 US$), introduced 1973