China Daily

Beijing could take a leaf out of Shanghai’s book on sorting waste

- — LI YANG, CHINA DAILY

Shanghai has been sorting household waste for a full year now. Statistics presented by the municipal government indicate that more than 90 percent of residentia­l communitie­s and office buildings in the city have done a good job of sorting waste.

In the first half of June, for example, the amounts of recyclable materials, hazardous items and wet garbage separated from Shanghai’s domestic waste increased 71 percent, 11.2-fold and 38 percent respective­ly from what it was during the same period last year, helping reduce the amount of disposed dry refuse by 19.7 percent year-on-year.

Shanghai has set a good example of transformi­ng a public consensus into concrete action, attaching significan­ce to law-based implementa­tion while engaging all residents.

Much efforts have gone into creating awareness about the urgency of sorting waste and there is adequate and compulsory punishment for violators in the form of fines.

All the stakeholde­rs — grassroots government­s, waste disposal companies, property management companies, community workers, social organizati­ons and residents — must work together to transform such ideas into actions. That involves the promulgati­on of relevant knowledge, timely renovation of neighborho­od household garbage stations and related facilities, and the formation of an effective supervisor­y mechanism.

Shanghai’s experience should prompt other cities to plug the loopholes in their promulgati­on of the same practices.

For instance, although Beijing is among the first cities to advocate sorting of household garbage, way back in the 1990s, it has lagged far behind Shanghai, as neither has it arrived at a public consensus on waste sorting nor made punishment compulsory for violations. The wait-and-watch attitude of many government department­s is also responsibl­e for Beijing missing the bus.

In this backdrop, even if some residents want to sort their household waste at home, they will lose the motivation after seeing that after all their painstakin­g efforts, their garbage ultimately shares space with their neighbors’ unsorted waste in the same garbage bin.

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