The Star Malaysia

400 e-waste containers abandoned in major Thai ports

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BANGKOK: About 400 cargo containers full of electronic waste, plastic scrap and discarded metal have been left unclaimed at Thailand’s two major ports as authoritie­s crack down on illegal e-waste handling.

If they are not claimed within the next 15 days, the Customs Department will either dispose of them or send them back to their point of departure.

Most of them come from the United States, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong and China.

“Importers have already failed to claim these containers within the 30-day time frame but we will give them 15 more days,” Customs Department spokesman Chaiyut Kumkun said yesterday.

He said the next normal step would be to inform the export transporta­tion firms involved that no one had claimed the containers they had sent to the Thai ports.

“It’s the duty of these firms to contact importers and tell them to claim the containers within 15 days,” Chaiyut said.

He added that beyond that deadline, items inside containers could be seized, disposed of or sent back.

“If they are sent back, the (export) firms will have to cover the transporta­tion cost.

“If they are disposed of, either the transporta­tion firm or importers will have to shoulder the expense arising from the disposal,” he said.

At present, there are a total of 428 containers of e-waste, plastic scrap and discarded metal pieces at the Bangkok Port. Of them, 100 are unclaimed.

In addition, there are about 1,000 containers of e-waste, plastic scrap and discarded metal pieces at the Laem Chabang Port. Of these, 300 are unclaimed.

Chaiyut suspected that importers had not come forward because they were afraid of recent intense scrutiny and strict law enforcemen­t against firms engaged in unlawful e-waste disposal.

E-waste has caught the spotlight after police found many plants had disposed of such waste using substandar­d methods, polluting the environmen­t and causing health risks.

Industrial Works Department’s deputy director-general Banjong Sukreeta said his department had suspended the import of e-waste since June 22.

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