Global Times

Smart devices help Shanghai sort garbage

- By Wang Qi

Shanghai, the first Chinese mainland city to implement a compulsory garbage classifica­tion regulation in July, is using intellectu­al platforms that can count the amount of garbage residents dump to enhance recycling.

A residentia­l area in Shanghai’s Baoshan district is using 10 sets of such smart bins, local news site thepaper.cn reported.

Through data shown on the screen, staff of the platform will know the amount of garbage collected and when and who dumped them, thepaper.cn reported on Thursday.

The smart bin can also help social workers. For example, for elderly people living alone, a social worker will go to their home to check if the elderly people failed to dump garbage.

The “green fortune card” issued in 2016 by Shanghai environmen­tal authoritie­s is the premise of the big data platform.

The card is meant to encourage daily garbage sorting and to build an eco-friendly way of life in the city, according to the city government’s website.

Residents can swipe the card after selecting the waste type on a screen above the smart bins, and the bin will open automatica­lly. After the trash is dumped, residents will receive correspond­ing points which they could exchange for small gifts.

The city government said more than 7.28 million Shanghai families have joined the project, and 6.31 million cards have been distribute­d.

Residents and experts hailed the use of hightech equipment in garbage recycling, saying it is more convenient than expected.

But proper garbage disposal and infrastruc­ture constructi­on should catch up to avoid such a good idea from becoming a formalism project, Luo Yameng, a Beijing-based urban-planning and eco-city expert, told the Global Times on Thursday.

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