The Guardian (Charlottetown)

School children help clean up Taiwan lantern festival mess

- FABIAN HAMACHER AND ANN WANG

PINGXI, Taiwan - Every year on the cusp of spring, hundreds of lanterns float into the skies around a small town in northern Taiwan, a spectacula­r light show that is one of the island’s top tourist draws.

When the flames go out though, the spent lanterns fall back to earth littering the countrysid­e around Pingxi, in the mountains outside of Taipei.

Now a group of volunteers is leading school children to scour the countrysid­e to gather the debris and take it to be disposed of safely.

Chu Tai-shu said he hopes to inspire the next generation to spread the word about what he thinks is a destructiv­e practice.

“This is the effect we want to achieve, this is why we chose to take the children,” he told Reuters.

Lanterns are launched into the skies, powered by small wads of burning paper soaked in oil as a way of seeking good fortune and wishes for the year ahead, traditiona­lly at the end of the Lunar New Year which marks the start of spring.

In Pingxi, they are released year-round. The region’s damp climate - it receives one of the highest amounts of annual rainfall in Taiwan - mitigates the risk the lanterns will set off forest fires when they come back down to earth.

But for many years, environmen­tal groups have criticised the lantern festival as negatively impacting the fields and forests around Pingxi when leaving behind the wire frames that give them their structure.

Revellers commonly write the date of their wishes on the lanterns and Chu said he sometimes finds lanterns more than five years old on his garbage collection hikes.

New Taipei’s government, which oversees the festivitie­s, has also started organising garbage collection hikes, and has collected more than 160 kg (350 lbs) and about 21 bags of garbage over the two weeks of the festival this year.

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