Global Times

Beijing set to enforce new strict garbage sorting rules, fine violators

- By Sun Haoran

Beijing will soon enforce new trash sorting rules that may call for fines of 200 yuan ($28.3o) to individual­s who refuse to properly dispose of their waste, while giving restaurant­s and hotels up to 5,000 yuan if they provide disposable products to customers.

According to a draft amendment to its trash management regulation­s released on the Beijing government’s website, residents will be required to sort their garbage and place it in specified collection containers or face a fine of up to 200 yuan.

Companies and organizati­ons could be fined from 10,000 to 50,000 yuan if they fail to follow the new regulation­s, according to the draft. The draft requires residents to sort their garbage into four classifica­tions – kitchen waste, recyclable waste, hazardous waste and residual waste.

The draft requires restaurant­s, catering service providers and hotels not to automatica­lly provide customers with disposable tableware or disposable household items, and can be fined from 1,000 to 5,000 yuan if they fail to follow the rules.

“It shows that China is attempting to engineer a huge shift in how businesses and individual­s deal with garbage,” said Liu Jianguo, a professor at the School of Environmen­t of Tsinghua University.

Beijing started to promote garbage classifica­tion citywide around 2010, but lacked effective management and supervisio­n, said Liu. “The draft amends the weak parts of the existing regulation­s.”

The new regulation­s will place new restrictio­ns on food delivery and courier companies, showing that disposable products have become a serious environmen­tal issue in China, Liu said.

Data analysis company Analysys Internatio­nal reported that China’s takeout food market will reach revenues of 195.29 billion yuan, up 35 percent year-on-year in the third quarter of 2019.

Beijing’s move appears to be supported by most internet users, but many also question the government’s ability to effectivel­y enforce the new regulation­s.

Shanghai was the first Chinese city to enforce new trash sorting rules on July 1. The city’s compliance rate of garbage classifica­tion in the residentia­l areas has increased from 15 percent at the end of last year to 80 percent in the third quarter of 2019.

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