China Daily

Promoting the circular economy can also stimulate consumptio­n

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IN A NEWS CONFERENCE of the two sessions in Beijing on Wednesday, He Lifeng, chairman of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said that the commission is drafting a recycling policy for used cars and household appliances to promote the developmen­t of the circular economy. Beijing News comments:

Chinese people use more than 200 million cars and hundreds of millions of refrigerat­ors, TV sets, air conditione­rs, washing machines and other household appliances, many of which are replaced by new ones each year.

Statistics of the China Renewable Resources Recycling Associatio­n indicate that each year the number of household appliances and electronic products scrapped increases by about 20 percent. These include not only the ones that have reached the end of their useful life but also the ones replaced by new ones long before their retirement age.

With the coming of intelligen­t household appliance era, the upgrading of domestic appliances will only become faster.

According to the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, only 5 percent of nearly 400 million scrapped smartphone­s are recycled, with 50 percent sleeping somewhere at the owners’ home, covered with dust, 20 percent get thrown away as rubbish and 15 percent are sold on. As for scrapped cars, 75 percent of their parts are recycled in some developed countries, while the proportion is about 10 percent in China. Most unwanted cars find their way into steel furnaces as old metal.

The huge recycling market has great untapped potential. Although many parties, ranging from small vendors to internet platforms, are active in the business, there has not yet formed a wholesome wellregula­ted market or an efficient and complete industrial chain behind it. Which results in serious waste of resources, land and energy, and causes grave pollution.

It is good to see the problem has finally grabbed the authoritie­s’ attention. The government should expedite the making of relevant rules and regulation­s to strengthen supervisio­n, regulation and administra­tion of the market and relevant industries.

The government can provide some subsidies at first to help raise people’s awareness of recycling their old household appliances, which is the very first step to put the developmen­t of the industry on the right track.

Also, the legislatur­e can consider passing a law making it an obligation for the companies that produce household appliances to collect and recycle, which has been the practice in some developed countries for a long time.

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