The Borneo Post (Sabah)

In Indonesia, splits emerge over efforts to stem plastic tide

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JAKARTA: As Indonesia struggles with mountains of plastic waste going into landfill and polluting its rivers and oceans, business groups are pushing to overturn restrictio­ns on importing plastic scrap into Southeast Asia’s biggest economy.

Indonesia, an archipelag­o of more than 17,000 islands, is estimated to be the world’s secondlarg­est contributo­r of plastic pollutants in the oceans after China, according to a 2015 study published in Science journal.

To tackle this, the government last year pledged up to US$1 billion a year to reduce marine plastic debris by 70 per cent by 2025.

But emerging divisions in the government on the issue of waste pose a fresh challenge to these targets. Partly driving this rift is a push by the plastics industry to overturn a halt in scrap imports, which was introduced in June on concerns about a flood of waste from western countries arriving after China barred such imports.

Industry minister Airlangga Hartarto last month sent a letter urging the environmen­t ministry to lift its bar on imports because Indonesia does not currently produce enough suitable plastic waste to feed its recycling industry.

In the letter, reviewed by Reuters, Hartarto argued Indonesia needs 600,000 tonnes of imported scrap a year, much bigger than its usual 110,000 tonnes. He said the country enjoyed about a US$40 million trade surplus by exporting recycled plastics.

“This is a potential industry that creates a lot of jobs,” said Taufiek Bawazier, director of downstream chemical industry at the industry ministry, cautioning that focusing only on the environmen­tal risks could harm the industry.

According to the 2015 Science journal report, almost half of the 3.2 million tonnes of plastic waste Indonesia produces in a year ends up in the sea.

The issue was graphicall­y highlighte­d in November when a sperm whale was found dead with 6 kg of plastic waste in its stomach on an Indonesian beach.

But the government’s waste reduction targets are complicate­d by a lack of recycling culture or awareness of environmen­tal damage in the developing country of 260 million people.

Poor waste management means plastic trash that goes to landfills is too dirty to feed Indonesia’s recycling industry, Bawazier said, adding that business would take more than the annual 1.1 million tonnes of local scrap if it was available.

Plastics lobby groups say downstream to upstream plastic industries employ 130,000 directly, while millions make a livelihood by scavenging for waste like plastic bottles for a small bit of cash.

“We must not hate plastic,” said Christine Halim, chairwoman of Indonesia’s recycling associatio­n, noting that buying foreign scrap was much cheaper than making products with virgin plastic and, as long as the environmen­t was protected, should be seen as a business opportunit­y. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows a government worker uses a raft to gather plastic and other debris for collection and disposal from the Sekretaris River in Jakarta. — Reuters photo
File photo shows a government worker uses a raft to gather plastic and other debris for collection and disposal from the Sekretaris River in Jakarta. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows plastic and styrofoam garbage litters the shoreline in Cilincing in Jakarta, Indonesia. — Reuters photo
File photo shows plastic and styrofoam garbage litters the shoreline in Cilincing in Jakarta, Indonesia. — Reuters photo

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