China Daily (Hong Kong)

Compulsory garbage sorting begins in capital

- By XIN WEN xinwen@chinadaily.com.cn

Mandatory citywide garbage sorting will begin in Beijing on Friday, aided by new guidelines for residents and the start of a three-month inspection campaign to monitor enforcemen­t.

The strict garbage sorting rules require residents to classify their domestic trash into four different categories: kitchen waste, recyclable­s, hazardous waste and other waste. Those who fail to sort their garbage properly could face fines of up to 200 yuan ($28).

Communitie­s and villages across the capital must set up four different colored trash bins, said Li Rugang, deputy director of the Beijing Urban Management Commission.

Green bins will be for kitchen waste, blue ones for recyclable­s, red for hazardous waste and gray for other waste.

Li said that to help residents better classify their domestic trash, four supporting measures would specify the management standards and implementa­tion procedures for classifyin­g garbage.

For example, a guideline released on Monday advised residents to have two trash bins and one garbage bag at home to make the separation of different kinds of waste more convenient.

“We plan to control the total amount of domestic waste in all districts of Beijing at the source in this way,” Li said.

By Monday, the city had more than 113,000 waste classifica­tion bins and sorting stations, as well as 980 enclosed cleaning stations and small garbage transfer stations for trash sorting, according to the capital’s urban management authoritie­s.

Law enforcemen­t agencies will launch a three-month inspection to monitor compliance with compulsory trash sorting on Friday, said Wen Tianwu, deputy director of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of City Administra­tion and Law Enforcemen­t.

The inspection, lasting until the end of July, will focus on mixed waste and its dumping and transport, he said.

Meanwhile, the city’s market supervisio­n authoritie­s will begin a three-month crackdown on the illegal use and sale of plastic bags.

Under the newly revised domestic waste regulation, supermarke­ts,

I hope to use the treatment facility to make residents more familiar with the processing of garbage and spur their enthusiasm for trash sorting. Wei Li, a residentia­l community director in Haidian district

shopping malls and trade markets may no longer use super thin or free plastic bags. Restaurant­s and hotels must stop offering disposable items unless customers request them.

By the end of March, there were 44 domestic waste treatment facilities in Beijing, capable of handling 32,711 metric tons of trash a day, the capital’s urban management authoritie­s said. The capital collected 10.11 million tons of household waste last year.

Some residentia­l communitie­s in Beijing have introduced incentives to encourage residents to sort their garbage. Residents can earn points by classifyin­g their domestic waste correctly and then exchange the points they accumulate for daily necessitie­s such as napkins and soap.

Wei Li, a residentia­l community director in the capital’s Haidian district, said her community had explored new ways of reusing kitchen waste as fertilizer for the residents’ rooftop garden.

She said the community acquired a trash treatment machine last year from Shanghai — the first Chinese city to implement compulsory trash sorting — that can recycle some kitchen waste not containing oil, salt or water through compressio­n, dehydratio­n and fermentati­on to produce organic soil in 24 hours as fertilizer for potted plants.

“At present, the trash sorting treatment facility can process about 1,000 kilograms of kitchen waste every day, which can be converted to about 100 kg of nutrient-rich soil,” Wei said.

“I hope to use the treatment facility to make residents more familiar with the processing of garbage and spur their enthusiasm for trash sorting.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A mother teaches her daughter the colors of bins for different types of domestic trash at a promotiona­l center in Beijing’s Haidian district on Thursday. The capital is launching mandatory garbage sorting on Friday.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A mother teaches her daughter the colors of bins for different types of domestic trash at a promotiona­l center in Beijing’s Haidian district on Thursday. The capital is launching mandatory garbage sorting on Friday.

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