The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia targets trash-burning plants and recycling in face of China rubbish ban

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SYDNEY: Australia will invest in trash-burning incinerato­rs and aim for all packaging to be 100 percent recycled by 2025 after China, which took one third of the country’s rubbish, banned waste imports, its environmen­t minister said on Friday.

The Chinese ban from March 1 affects 1.25 million tonnes of Australian waste, worth an estimated A$850 million (US$640 million), according to government­commission­ed research by consultanc­y Blue Environmen­t.

Environmen­t Minister Josh Frydenberg said he had directed government funding bodies to “prioritise” waste-to-energy projects, which include incinerato­rs and landfill gas harvesting.

“Obviously we’d like to see waste reused or recycled, primarily, but waste-to-energy is a legitimate source of generation,” Frydenberg told reporters in Melbourne.

Recycling is a A$5 billion industry in Australia, according to research firm IBISWorld.

In Australia about 30 waste-toenergy projects are operationa­l, mostly confined to small incinerato­rs and co-generation plants, though a handful of larger projects are on the drawing board. A public backlash due to pollution fears saw a major project in Sydney stall in 2018. China, the world’s biggest importer of plastic waste, has stopped accepting shipments of rubbish, such as plastic and paper, as part of a campaign against “foreign garbage”.

The ban has upended the world’s waste handling supply chain and caused massive pile-ups of trash from Asia to Europe, as exporters struggled to find new buyers for the garbage. Government­s in Britain and the European Union have focused on boosting recycling rates in response to the Chinese ban, the British introducin­g a deposit return scheme for plastic bottles and the EU mulling a plastic tax. — Reuters

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