China Daily

Volvo all-in on electric cars and online retail

- By CAO YINGYING

Chinese-owned Swedish automaker Volvo said last week it will produce only electric vehicles by 2030 and sell them all exclusivel­y online. Inspired and challenged by Elon Musk’s pioneering Tesla brand, Volvo and others plan to ditch fossil fuel vehicles in the next few years. It comes as demand for zero-emission cars is rising and government­s are pressuring firms to cut pollution. “The company intends to only sell fully electric cars and phase out any car in its global portfolio with an internal combustion engine, including hybrids,” Volvo said in a statement. The company said half of its cars should be electric in 2025, with half of the sales happening online by then.

Progress was made in Beijing’s management of household waste during the 13th Five-Year Plan period (2016-20), with the introducti­on of mandatory garbage sorting and increased levels of recycling.

Zhang Yan, deputy director and spokesman of the Beijing Commission of Urban Management, said Beijing residents’ awareness of and participat­ion in garbage sorting have both increased significan­tly.

As of May 2020, Beijing residents have been required to sort their household waste into the four categories of kitchen, recyclable, hazardous and other waste.

Over the past five years, the amount of food waste that has been separated from other garbage has risen from 309 metric tons per day to 4,248 tons. If food waste isn’t separated and instead goes to a landfill, it rots and produces methane — a powerful greenhouse gas. When food waste is separated it can be ground up to produce water, carbon dioxide and organic solids that can be refined into fertilizer.

The recycling rate of domestic garbage has risen to more than 35 percent, according to the local government.

The city has designated 366 demonstrat­ion communitie­s and villages for garbage sorting. Among them, Fuquan Garden community in Changping district has achieved more than 90 percent accuracy in its sorting.

Over the past five years, Beijing has added 20 waste disposal facilities, bringing the city’s total to 46, with a total processing capacity of 33,800 tons per day, Zhang said.

For constructi­on waste, the city has 108 resource disposal facilities in operation.

Continuing the green theme, more than 80 percent of the city’s sanitation vehicles under 4.5 tons run on new energy.

Looking ahead, the city’s goal is that by May the accuracy rate of voluntary garbage sorting will reach 85 percent, the separation rate of household kitchen waste will remain at around 18 percent and the recycling rate of household waste will stand at more than 35 percent.

To further reduce food waste, restaurant­s are being urged to provide smaller portions and to advise customers to order in moderation.

 ?? REN CHAO / XINHUA ?? A staff member of a community garbage-sorting management center in Beijing learns about informatio­n via an intelligen­t system.
REN CHAO / XINHUA A staff member of a community garbage-sorting management center in Beijing learns about informatio­n via an intelligen­t system.

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