China Daily

Rural families in Inner Mongolia get ahead of the trash-sorting curve

- By LI LEI and YUAN HUI xiaokang shehui Contact the writers at lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Garbage sorting has topped the agendas of China’s first-tier cities as landfills scramble to cope with ever-increasing waste. The logic behind it: the usually better-educated urban residents will adapt more easily when the practice of dumping all waste into one bin abruptly ends.

But with efforts also picking up in a dozen remote Chinese villages near the border with Mongolia, officials have come to realize that frugality, celebrated as a top virtue among hundreds of millions of less affluent rural people, is also facilitati­ng the change.

“Before the rules were enforced in the village last year, I had already been sorting garbage, though very roughly,” said Zheng Huanqing, a farmer from Taiping township in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region.

For generation­s, his extensive family has been using chicken droppings and kitchen leftovers to generate organic fertilizer­s that have been widely used in rural backyard gardens that grow fruits and vegetables.

Pesticide containers were stacked away to keep children and animals from getting poisoned after some accidents raised public awareness of the issue.

Cardboard and other recyclable­s were also put away so they could be sold to scavengers who would visit regularly.

“The things that often went to the dustbins were actually broken bricks and plastic bags, which were not much said.

Last year, authoritie­s in Tuquan county, which oversees the township, rolled out a set of garbage sorting rules that were tailored to the situation on the ground.

Unlike the intricate waste sorting rules applied in Shanghai, Beijing and other urban frontrunne­rs the county authoritie­s formulated rules based on farmers’ habits.

They opted for five categories: burnable, nonburnabl­e, perishable, recyclable, and hazardous.

The deputy head of Tuquan county, Feng Jianzhong, said the rules allowed villagers to continue swapping recyclable­s for cash and to set aside pollutants for collectors.

Perishable items can be used to create fertilizer­s, and the remaining waste is sorted based on whether it burns.

Since only nonburnabl­e waste goes to landfills, the new arrangemen­t helps to alleviate the pressure facing such facilities, he said.

To facilitate the rolling out of the rules, local authoritie­s also created catchy ballads for farmers to remember, local publicity official Li Fanghui said.

Garbage sorting is part of a broader effort by the county to improve the hygiene and environmen­t of rural villages as China races to complete the building of a “moderately prosperous society” — known as — nationwide.

The county also introduced a reward system to encourage farmers who play by the rules. Residents who keep their doorways clean and comply with the garbage sorting rules will get reward points.

The data will be updated each month and farmers will be able to convert the points to commoditie­s at designated supermarke­ts at the end of the year. to begin with,” Zheng

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