The Niagara Falls Review

Feds back global recycling as Canadian garbage rots

Canada shuns pact amid talks on its waste abroad

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OTTAWA — Canada won’t sign on to an amendment to an internatio­nal treaty that could bar three dozen countries from shipping any kind of garbage, even recyclable­s, to the developing world.

The amendment to the Basel Convention that puts limitation­s on shipments of hazardous waste was proposed more than 20 years ago but has resurfaced in Canada recently as scores of shipping containers filled with rotting Canadian garbage sit in ports in the Philippine­s.

The 103 containers were sent to Manila in 2013 and 2014 labelled as plastics for recycling but Filipino authoritie­s discovered they actually contained household waste including adult diapers, food and electronic­s.

A Filipino court ordered Canada to take the garbage back but that hasn’t happened.

And now the two countries have formed a working group to find a way of disposing the waste in an environmen­tally conscious manner.

An official with Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada says the federal government amended its own regulation­s around hazardous waste shipments in 2016 to prevent such events from happening again.

However, the official also says Canada is not in favour of the Basel Convention amendment that could prevent global shipments of recyclable materials, as there are sound environmen­tal reasons for having internatio­nal recycling and recovery operations.

 ?? AARON FAVILA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Filipino environmen­tal activists protest with a mock container van filled with garbage outside the Canadian embassy south of Manila in 2015.
AARON FAVILA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filipino environmen­tal activists protest with a mock container van filled with garbage outside the Canadian embassy south of Manila in 2015.

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