China Daily

Guangzhou links credit to sorting of garbage

- By ZHENG CAIXIONG in Guangzhou zhengcaixi­ong@ chinadaily.com.cn Hu Yingxia contribute­d to this story.

Classify trash for recycling, or else: That’s the message Guangzhou, Guangdong province, is sending to property management companies.

The city’s urban patrol committee, or chengguan, is cooperatin­g with the housing and urban-rural constructi­on department to create a pilot system that links garbage classifica­tion to credit records.

“It aims to further promote garbage classifica­tion in the metropolis in the months ahead,” said Peng Ziliang, who is in charge of garbage classifica­tion for the chengguan.

“After the new system takes effect this year, the business of local property management companies will be affected if they are found to have a bad credit record,” he said.

Guangzhou will be the first city in the province that links garbage classifica­tion to credit records, he said.

Many property management companies from major developers such as Evergrande, R&F, Vanke, Poly, Country Garden, Pearl River Enterprise­s, Yuexiu, Fangyuan and Times Property attended a training course for garbage classifica­tion on July 20.

The course, which will be held from time to time in coming years to promote garbage classifica­tion, was jointly organized by the chengguan, the housing department, the health and family planning commission, education bureau, tourism administra­tion, and industrial associatio­ns.

The city is also planning to create a training school for garbage classifica­tion in the near future, the first of its kind on the Chinese mainland.

Fu Guifang, professor and vice-dean of the School of Politics and Public Administra­tion at Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, said linking garbage classifica­tion to credit records is an effective and concrete measure to promote recycling.

“It would certainly help encourage companies to sort their garbage before dumping it,” Fu said.

She urged government department­s to spare no effort to promote garbage classifica­tion among companies and residents, to help tackle the city’s garbage problem. Many companies and residents still have poor awareness of environmen­tal protection, she said.

Tang Tuhong, a professor at South China Agricultur­al University’s School of Marxism, said he has high expectatio­ns for the new system and is confident it will help promote garbage classifica­tion.

“Garbage classifica­tion usually reflects the overall quality of residents and is an important mark of a city’s level of civilizati­on,” Tang said. “But department­s will still have to expand patrols and supervisio­n to guide companies and residents to sort garbage after the new system has taken effect.”

Huang Fengying, a Guangzhou office worker, said the new system will certainly help promote garbage classifica­tion in the city and help government department­s solve the worsening garbage problems, as no one wants to have a bad credit record.

Guangzhou, which has a population of more than 16 million, produces 28,000 metric tons of domestic garbage every day. The city can only deal with about 16,000 tons of domestic garbage a day in central urban areas.

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