Shanghai Daily

Pudong looks into garbage dumping in greenbelt

- Li Qian

PUDONG’S environmen­tal authority has launched an investigat­ion following media exposure of garbage dumping and burning in a greenbelt for years.

A tip-off led Shanghai Radio Station to report yesterday that large amounts of constructi­on waste residues, plastic bags and abandoned furniture were illegally dumped or buried in a 2-kilometerl­ong greenbelt near Fute Road W. and Huashen Road in the Pudong New Area.

A shabby garbage incinerato­r, featuring a 3-meter-high chimney, stands on the belt. It has been used to burn dead leaves, waste plastics and other garbage for several years, causing a bad smell that overwhelme­d nearby residents, an unnamed whistleblo­wer told the radio station.

An unidentifi­ed elderly man was found weeding a vegetable garden, nearly the size of two basketball courts, in the greenbelt. He told the radio station that several local families were allowed to grow vegetables in the garden.

Pudong Environmen­tal Protection and City Appearance Sanitation Bureau told Shanghai Daily that it has intervened, and the investigat­ion is still ongoing.

However, it remains unknown who is in charge of the place.

The government of Gaodong Town said the greenbelt has been administer­ed by its neighborin­g Shanghai Free Trade Zone since 1992. But the free trade zone denied it, with an anonymous official with the zone’s administra­tion saying it is an “ungoverned” land.

There was no comment from the Pudong government.

Pudong has two upgraded garbage incinerato­rs in Yuqiao and Laogang. They can generate electricit­y while handling garbage.

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