Shanghai Daily

Shanghai sorting out a sustainabl­e future

- Wan Lixin

ON November 6, President Xi Jinping, while visiting a community center in Shanghai’s Hongkou District, commented that waste-sorting is a “new fashion,” and that Shanghai should make sure that garbage management is done well.

Waste management is a growing issue for cities and, increasing­ly, villages as well. An enlightene­d resident can no longer simply drop anything into a rubbish bin and forget about it. We are all well aware that unless our trash is disposed of properly — every day a more challengin­g affair — it may return to haunt us, not just in the bulging suburban landfills encroachin­g upon us, but also in the air, water and food that our lives rely on.

Sorted garbage saves landfill space, as some trash can be recycled, reused, incinerate­d or used as fuel.

In 2000, Shanghai was one of first eight cities to pilot garbage sorting. By the end of this year, 46 cities are expected to demonstrat­e best practices in rubbish separation.

On the face of it, sorting should be a simple procedure, at least for residents who have woken up to the fact that trash categorizi­ng is vital to the treatment and efficient disposal of waste.

In reality, promoting sorting as a general practice across a neighborho­od — not to say across the city — is a great challenge.

After ten years of “sorting,” on a trial basis, in the eight selected cities, it was found that sorting was more about publicizin­g than a matter of substance.

Effective garbage separation needs to be done with resolution, perseveran­ce, innovation and finesse.

In Longbai Huayuan in Changning District, for instance, originally four bins labeled “wet,” “dry,” recyclable” and “hazardous” were placed side by side. While the fine distinctio­n makes a lot of sense, upon considerat­ion, the number of trash boxes has been reduced to “dry” and “wet,” on the assumption that this is enough for beginners.

The challenge for arriving at semantic clarity also explains some of the confusion observable on the streets.

Today, predominan­t trash receptacle­s generally consists of two units labeled “dry” and “recyclable,” though I am still trying to figure out how these two labels come to be dichotomie­s, and why the correspond­ing English equivalent­s given are “residual waste” and “recyclable.”

Icons and verbal instructio­ns clarify the situation somewhat, though they are not always available, or conspicuou­s enough.

Adding to seeking semantic clarity is the challenge of educating people long accustomed to viewing trash disposal into any garbage bin as a civic virtue.

This entails meticulous work, not just for each individual who produces rubbish, but community work as well: giving lectures in neighborho­ods, handing out pamphlets and brochures, giving people trash bins for their homes with separate chambers for dry and wet waste, friendly persuasion, and on-site patrols. In some kindergart­ens children play a game designed to teach them how to properly sort their trash.

Throwaway society

An old neighborho­od in Shanghang New Village, in Changning District, was among the first to test fixed-time, fixedlocat­ion garbage drop-off.

The initiative first met with some resistance in this neighborho­od largely peopled by migrants from other provinces.

What emerged was that it is more effective for fellow townsfolk to persuade each other, than to be preached by “outsiders.”

In some communitie­s, Party members and officials are on site to ensure compliance.

According to an ambitious municipal three-year plan, household garbage sorting should be a general practice by 2020. By then all households will be expected to classify their trash into four types: hazardous, recyclable, dry and wet.

Significan­tly, the daily volume of dry waste would be reduced from 21,400 to 18,100 tons.

In a world that prides itself on convenienc­e, as represente­d by disposable­s and consumeris­m, the matter of waste sorting entails a conceptual leap forward, whereby a process of simply dumping anything we want onto one giant bin becomes a complicate­d, messy business.

Pampered by convenienc­e in all its multifario­us forms, we are accustomed to easy answers, gift-wrapped solutions, a silver bullet.

It has never been easier to get “stuff.” Huge quantities of what will eventually become trash are delivered to our doorsteps as a direct result of a few desultory taps on our phones.

A simple, passing impulse is all that is required. It is only when we are confronted with the messy and smelly stuff left behind that we begin to question the throwaway society we have created.

Garbage sorting and fixed-time collection­s put the onus of garbage categorizi­ng on those responsibl­e for creating the trash in the first place. The tedious business should make us think twice before we splurge out on something we do not really need and will junk soon afterwards.

Inconvenie­nce should compel us to link our individual excesses with such issues as prolonged heatwaves, melting glaciers, rising sea levels and a myriad signs of environmen­tal deteriorat­ion on this finite planet.

By exemplifyi­ng the best practice in sorting, Shanghai is playing a role in ensuring that our inevitably shared future is a sustainabl­e one for all.

Shanghai people have long been recognized for their astuteness, attention to detail, heightened sense of discipline and a ceaseless pursuit of perfection.

All these qualities, as expressed through this sorting endeavor, will be valuable weapons in what is bound to be an uphill battle.

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