Oman Daily Observer

Australia to stop exporting its trash

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SYDNEY: Australia has pledged to stop exporting recyclable waste amid global concerns about plastic polluting the oceans and increasing pushback from Asian nations against accepting trash. Prime Minister Scott Morrison agreed with Australian state and territory leaders to prepare a timeline to phase out the exports of recyclable­s like plastics, paper and glass. “It’s our waste and it’s our responsibi­lity,” he told reporters on Friday.

“We’re laying it out very clearly that there will be no export of plastics and paper and glass to other countries where it runs the risk of ending up floating around in our oceans — whether off the Great Barrier Reef, which we know there’s strong evidence of that, or anywhere else,” he said.

“We will do everything that is in our remit to achieve that goal,” he added. No deadline has been set but local leaders have been tasked with reducing landfill and boosting the recycling sector in Australia, where just 12 per cent of plastics are currently recycled.

Government figures show the country shipped over four million tonnes, or 12 per cent, of its recyclable waste overseas last financial year, largely to Asian countries.

China began restrictin­g imports on foreign plastics in 2017, leaving developed nations seeking new destinatio­ns to dump their rubbish.

They started shipping huge amounts of trash to other Asian nations like Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Indonesia.

But they too have been pushing back. Indonesia last month said it would return more than 210 tonnes of garbage to Australia. Earlier this year, G20 nations agreed on a voluntary plan to reduce the plastic waste choking the seas.

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