China Daily (Hong Kong)

In Shanghai, efforts to sort garbage get helping hand

- By XING YI in Shanghai xingyi@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai’s Hongkou district has establishe­d an associatio­n focused on trash sorting as the city gears up to enforce its first regulation on domestic waste management.

The rule takes effect on July 1, to the applause of environmen­talists and the green industry.

Organizers said the associatio­n — the Shanghai Hongkou New Fashion Garbage Classifica­tion Office — is the first social group of its kind in the city. It released a guide for promoting trash sorting in residentia­l neighborho­ods during its founding ceremony on Monday.

Tang Jiafu, deputy director of the city’s greening and appearance bureau, which is responsibl­e for guiding residents to sort their garbage, said educationa­l materials have been compiled to teach people how to classify their garbage accurately. The bureau organized 12 training sessions for teachers, who will merge the informatio­n into their teaching.

“Garbage sorting should become fashionabl­e in society, and I encourage everyone to participat­e in the initiative,” said Ying Yong, Shanghai’s mayor.

The city, which is home to 24 million residents and produces more than 9 million metric tons of domestic garbage every year, aims to have trash sorting programs in all of its residentia­l neighborho­ods by 2020.

The regulation approved by the city’s legislativ­e authority at the end of January emphasizes garbage classifica­tion, separate transporta­tion and treatment.

The city has already launched pilot garbage sorting programs in six of its districts, and more than 3,300 recycling stations and 15 domestic waste treatment facilities are under constructi­on, according to the municipal government.

On Monday, Li Qiang, Shanghai’s Party secretary, visited the Aijian neighborho­od in Changning, one of the pilot districts, to see how the implementa­tion of the sorting program was coming along. He inspected a garbage transporta­tion hub in Xuhui district and Pudong New Area’s Laogang waste treatment center, which handles half the domestic waste produced in the city.

Li said ongoing efforts are needed to ensure the program’s success, which will help make Shanghai cleaner and tidier, and a more pleasant place to live.

Kate Sogor, who organizes weekly events for a running group that picks up litter from the streets, said transformi­ng the domestic waste management regulation into law shows that the government takes waste reduction and recycling seriously.

“Although it’ll probably take a while to develop the habit of separating trash, this is great,” she said. “This is how it starts.”

Yang Yuanhui, East China regional manager of Beijing Goldenway Bio-tech Co, which converts kitchen waste to fertilizer, said Shanghai’s new regulation will help companies like his cut costs and boost production.

He said many businesses in the sector face shortages and low quality raw material, and he believes the new regulation will bring more wellsorted “wet garbage” for the company to process.

Cao Weiqiu, managing director of Shanghai Mu Yin Investment, which focuses on environmen­tal projects, said recycling companies can convert almost all garbage back into useful resources and products.

The mandatory garbage classifica­tion regulation is good news for the industry, he said, because it requires government and public institutio­ns to give priority to purchasing products made from recycled materials.

“In the next step, government should provide incentives to direct more capital and enterprise­s into the circular economy,” Cao said.

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