Vinyl records are hurting the environment. These labels are helping
Sorry to rain on your all-analog parade.
Itβs no secret that vinyl recordsβ resurgence has hit a new plateau, outselling CDs for the first time since 1987 as of 2022, according to a report from the Recording Industry Assn. of America. Three years later, its year-end report flaunts another statistic: Vinyl record sales surpassed $1 billion in 2025 β the first time since 1983.
But thereβs an inevitable downside to anything thatβs partially made of liquid dinosaur bones. Modern vinyl records are crafted with PVC resin, which makes up more than 75% of an average disk The synthetic polymer itself is made of chlorine and fossil fuel-derived feed stock.
To put its harm in perspective, a first-of-its-kind report from Vinyl Alliance, published in June 2024, found that 50% of a recordβs carbon emissions come from this resin. The carbon footprint of a single LP was estimated to be roughly equal to the pollution a gas-powered vehicle emits over a three-mile trip. It adds up quick, considering that 46.8 million new records were sold last year.
Thankfully, itβs not all grim.
Organizations like Music Declares Emergency and the Music Climate Pact initiative are coming together to address the issue. A campaign by the groups β in collaboration with record labels and distribution teams at Secretly Group, Exceleration Music, Warp Records, Ninja Tune and Beggars Group β features titles pressed on 100% reclaimed material.
The release, set in tandem with World Environment Day on Friday, boasts marquee titles such as Elliott Smithβs βRoman Candle,β Bon Iverβs βFor Emma, Forever Agoβ and Dinosaur Jr.βs βYouβre Living All Over Me.β
βWhat we found talking to a lot of our artists and to customers is that β¦ they are concerned about the environment, and they want to find ways to reduce their footprint,β says Ben Swanson, co-founder of both Secretly Group and the Independent Record Pressing plant in Bordentown, N.J., where the LPs are made. βItβs about 16% less footprint than the traditional piece of vinyl.β
Soren Smith working at Independent Record Pressing in Bordentown, N.J., on May 26, 2026.
(Dutch Doscher / For The Times)
Largely, itβs been people like Swanson who have fully committed to the cause. He says that during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, in an βactivist moment,β several labels signed onto the Music Climate Pact, declaring their intention to reduce their emissions and be better stewards of Earth.
βIt had almost no teeth to it,β Swanson explains. βA lot of people signed it, posted something on Instagram, and it sat there for a few years. For us, it was pretty frustrating β¦ it felt very perfunctory.β
His work continued, along with a few others, thanks to support from Murmur, an organization designed to support labels and industry names, effectuating the commitments made when the Music Climate Pact was signed.
βWeβre more doers than sayers,β Swanson says. βWeβve really been experimenting with what weβre calling βRevinylβ β post-industrial, pre-consumer, recycled vinyl as a means to reduce our footprint at IRP.β
This is what some of Fridayβs release is made of β all the trimmings, tidbits and overstock that would otherwise end up in landfills or on the factory floor. For the time being, it certainly wonβt solve the climate cost of vinyl records, but it helps to mitigate it.
Between 2024 and 2025, total units produced at Independent Record Pressing increased by 41% while emissions β which also benefited from lower-carbon transportation β decreased by 34%.
βThe idea is, if you can make those records 16% more efficient and also show fans of those records β¦ that it is viable, maybe it makes it a little bit easier next year when we go out to ask other artists to jump on board,β Swanson explains. βWeβre not making records that are just going to go sit on the shelf β these are records weβre continually repressing all the time anyway.β
Similarly, Ian Stanton, head of sustainability at Beggars Group, was among the first to sign the pact in 2021. His role was created five years ago to give indie labels a voice in light of minimal resources and capabilities. Though these roles do exist at larger labels, he says they have βslightly different drivers.β
When it comes to records, the pure plastic pollution that comes from them is also a concern. When old records make it to a landfill, theyβre not only likely to outlive the site, but can also leach plasticizers, a Keele University report found.
βVinyl is not like a single-use plastic; we donβt throw it away after one listen. We treasure it, we pass it on through generations, and people have a real connection with it,β he says. βBut like any other product, there are ways of making it more sustainable.β
He refers to certain plastics, such as shrink wrap, as the most βvisibleβ aspect of vinyl record pollution to consumers. From a collectorβs point of view, shrink wrap can actually increase the value of a record. Though there has been discourse over the years around whether this can actually damage the sleeve, many sellers champion an βin the shrinkβ label as they mark up prices.
Splatter-patterned records arrive at the trim station at Independent Record Pressing in Bordentown, N.J., on May 26, 2026.
(Dutch Doscher / For The Times)
Other visible aspects, such as the paper sleeves in which the records are housed, are also harmful. However, Swanson says that swapping those for recycled materials outputs a relatively negligible difference in emissions impact, largely due to the process behind producing them.
For the time being, vinyl records made from reclaimed materials are the best that companies like Swansonβs can do, though theyβre are always on the lookout for other, viable options for improving their footprint. As an example, theyβre actively experimenting with how existing record material can help them.
What can the beat-up, worn-out records at your local thrift store do to dodge a landfill and keep the Earth spinning? As it stands, not much.
Stanton lists an array of challenges, including outdated materials, modern production regulations and contaminants.
βI suppose what we need with PVC for records is a really high-quality, contamination-free material to get that sound reproduction,β he explains. βWhen you bring in stuff from that post-consumer environment, youβve got to make sure thereβs no contamination in there, because youβre going to end up with sound quality issues.
βItβs all in process,β he adds.
For now, they look to fix the most immediate problems first, such as freight emissions, where Beggars Group has converted the vast majority of its shipping operations to sea freight, a far less harmful alternative compared with air freight.
βWe want to look at the full life cycle β¦ not only thinking from the cradle to the grave, but from the point where the raw materials are extracted at the beginning,β Stanton says. βThis life cycle analysis now looks at all different environmental indicators on this β the chemical usage, the water usage, and the end-of-life impacts on that side of things.β