Section § 42705

Explanation

This law highlights California's challenge with managing used tires, noting a stockpile of at least 100 million tires, increasing by 20 million annually. Various disposal methods are mentioned, including using shredded tires in asphalt. Cement manufacturers also use tires as kilns' fuel, helping reduce the state's reliance on imported fossil fuels and potentially improving air quality.

The Legislature hereby finds and declares as follows:
(a)CA Public Resources Code § 42705(a) California currently faces a serious problem with respect to the collection, disposal, and recycling of used tires that are no longer consumer usable.
(b)CA Public Resources Code § 42705(b) It is estimated that California has an existing tire inventory of at least 100 million tires, an amount which grows by over 20 million tires per year.
(c)CA Public Resources Code § 42705(c) California has pursued several methods of tire disposal including, but not limited to, shredding and as an additive to asphalt for paving material.
(d)CA Public Resources Code § 42705(d) The cement industry in California has implemented a process that utilizes used tires as fuel for the kilns essential to the manufacture of cement.
(e)CA Public Resources Code § 42705(e) Used tires utilized as fuel for those kilns are completely consumed, including the rubber, fiber, and steel ingredients of the tire.
(f)CA Public Resources Code § 42705(f) The use of used tires in that process benefits California by reducing reliance on fossil fuel imported from outside the state.
(g)CA Public Resources Code § 42705(g)The consumption of used tires rather than fossil fuel for the kilns may reduce air pollution and may contribute to the improvement of air quality.