The Phnom Penh Post

Shanghai leads battle against China’s growing waste crisis

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NIE FENG used to toss his rubbish outside his Shanghai flat without a thought while rushing to work, but sav ing China from a rubbish crisis now requires him to consult a complex diagram each morning.

On July 1, Shanghai launched China’s most ambitious waste separation and recycling programme ever, as the country confronts a rising tide of trash created by increasing consumptio­n.

But the programme is the ta lk of China’s biggest cit y for ot her reasons as well: confusion over rules and fines for infraction­s, and thousands of volunteers inspecting citizens’ private rubbish each day.

Nie examines a wall-sized diagram saying fish and pork bones must be separated from each other, and from the plastic bag he carries them in.

“It’s for the good of our homeland, but we keep making mista kes,” said Nie, a trading company sta f fer, laughing as he struggled to separate t he bag’s contents into various bins.

“We have to get this right before the fines really start.”

Shanghai is piloting a programme set for eventual nationwide adoption in what would likely be the world’s largest waste separation and recycling scheme – and it is desperatel­y needed.

With its 1.4 billion consumers, China is becoming swamped by rubbish. Every day, Shanghai’s 25 million people alone produce around 26,000 tonnes – equal in weight

to t he Statue of Libert y.

The issue is straining municipal services nationwide and prompting unrest.

Growing anger

Last week aut horities in t he centra l cit y of Wuhan sent riot police to quell protests by thousands of cit izens against constructi­on of a waste incinerato­r.

China is spending billions of dollars on waste-to-energy incinerati­on plants across the country, but repeated protests have flared over fears they will emit toxins. Wuhan has shelved its plan, for now.

China produced just 30 million tonnes of rubbish in 1980, but t hat soared to 210 million in 2017, according to World Bank figures.

That is still less than the world’s trash titan, the US, which produced 258 million tonnes. But China is gaining fast and the World Bank predicts Chinese rubbish could reach a staggering 500 million tonnes annually by 2030.

Several factors are blamed, including rapid growth and the Communist Party’s ongoing push to develop a domestic consumer economy to lessen reliance on the outside world.

Led by the likes of Alibaba, Chinese e-commerce has exploded, producing billions of parcel deliveries annually with t heir associated packaging.

The government indicated its alarm last year by banning certain imports of foreign waste that it used to accept for years for recycling, a move that has up-ended global rubbish flows.

“We need a really big push and I think the government realised that. There is really a sense of urgency,” said Alizee Buysschaer­t, founder and director of environmen­tal consultanc­y Zero Waste Shanghai.

With a phased national rollout set to gain pace next year, Shanghai’s experience has become one of the most talked-about topics in the country, though sometimes for the wrong reasons.

Critics have taken aim at seemingly contradict­ory sorting guidelines and the limited daily hours during which dumping is allowed, which causes problems for those with irregular schedules.

Chinese media reports also have indicated that a lot of garbage was still entering bins unsorted.

Government officials declined requests for comment.

‘So much rubbish’

Previous city-level sorting schemes have fizzled, but Buysschaer­t sees a difference this time.

“The big shift is that it is much more centralise­d and it’s incentivis­ed now. That’s really a game-changer because now everyone is talking about it and everyone is involved and on their toes,” she said.

Authoritie­s say strict sorting is crucial, making it far easier to separately process recycled items, hazardous waste, compost and biomass.

But tempers have flared. Chinese media said a 33-yearold woman was detained last week for choking a volunteer sorting inspector unconsciou­s during a rules dispute.

Fines range from 200 yuan ($29) for household infraction­s to 50,000 yuan for businesses, though authoritie­s are going easy on imposing them for now.

The scheme is a business opportunit y for ot hers, wit h start-ups of fering app-based rubbish collection and sorting ser v ices.

True to form, the Communist Party is pushing obeisance via a public campaign larded with red banners emblazoned with revolution­ary exhortatio­ns such as “storm the citadel of waste sorting.”

“We weren’t used to it at first. It was really inconvenie­nt,” said 67-year-old pensioner Zhou Shenzhu.

But she has been won over by a noticeable reduction in flies and odour since sorting started, she says.

“The propaganda on television says we face great harm if we don’t separate.”

“Shanghai has lots of people, and so much rubbish. So much!”

 ?? HECTOR RETAMAL/AFP ?? A man looks at piled up rubbish at a housing complex in Shanghai. Shanghai on July 1 launched China’s most ambitious waste separation and recycling programme ever, as the country confronts a rising tide of rubbish created by increasing­ly consumptiv­e ways.
HECTOR RETAMAL/AFP A man looks at piled up rubbish at a housing complex in Shanghai. Shanghai on July 1 launched China’s most ambitious waste separation and recycling programme ever, as the country confronts a rising tide of rubbish created by increasing­ly consumptiv­e ways.

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