It's probably a little bit of a stretch, but I'll provide the example of seat belts.
Seat belts are a requirement in vehicles. We require companies to have seat belts in vehicles. Vehicle companies innovate. They figure out the best way to put those seat belts in the car, and they figure out the cheapest way to do it. That's how they approach it.
With recycling, companies form a large agency, a monopsony, and that agency, then, figures out the price. It sets the price for recycling in a jurisdiction. That price gets passed directly on to you, as a consumer, through the retailer. You have no choice as to how much you're paying. There are no competitive tensions within the system to innovate or to find ways to do things more efficiently or more effectively. You are stuck with the price.
What I'm saying is that doesn't make sense based on the economic and market system we have. It's an issue that has come up in other jurisdictions in Europe. Europe has taken notice of that and has started to take actions. Germany is one example. When they took action to break up those monopsonies, the result was a 50% decrease in cost and better environmental standards.