Beijing Review

War Against Foreign Garbage

Qianjiang Evening News July 21

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China will ban imports of 24 types of solid waste, or foreign garbage, by the end of 2017 to fight against environmen­tal degradatio­n and pollution. China has notified the World Trade Organizati­on of the ban, which covers waste plastics, unsorted scrap paper, discarded textiles, vanadium slag and other kinds of waste, the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection announced at a press conference on July 20.

In the past decades, some imported solid waste was useful as raw materials because China lacked production materials. With the economic and social developmen­t and people’s rising attention to environmen­tal protection as well as public health, the fact that foreign garbage causes serious contaminat­ion to soil and water and threatens public health has become increasing­ly a matter of concern.

In recent years, China has handled several cases of foreign garbage being smuggled into the country. In June 2010, southwest China’s Chongqing cracked down on a smuggling case involving 11 tons of electronic­s waste. This was evidence that solid waste was being transferre­d from developed coastal regions to inland regions. So far, China is still the largest solid waste importer, importing 56 percent of the world’s total annually. In 2013, Britain admitted that 12 million tons of so-called “green garbage” was shipped to developing countries like China, India and Indonesia.

China being a landfill for the world’s garbage doesn’t match its developmen­t level or conform to the requiremen­ts of building a moderately prosperous society. Early in April, a reform plan on improving management of solid waste imports was adopted, a prelude to the announceme­nt of the ban on foreign garbage. In order to seek green developmen­t, China should say no to foreign garbage.

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