The Prince George Citizen

Experts call for ban on waste exports after Philippine garbage fiasco

- Mia RABSON

OTTAWA — There is no treasure in Canada’s trash and we need to stop heaping it onto the rest of the world, environmen­t advocates say.

The spotlight on the global shipping of garbage grew bright in recent weeks as the diplomatic fight over garbage between Canada and the Philippine­s gained internatio­nal attention. That garbage is now on a ship headed back for Canada, but environmen­t advocates hope the result will be more than just a rebuilding of our relationsh­ip with the Philippine­s.

They want Canada to stop allowing the export of waste and to cut the production and consumptio­n of most plastic packaging.

Myra Hird, a Queen’s University environmen­tal-studies professor who runs a research group looking at the impact of Canada’s waste and how waste is managed, said the only way Canada can prevent another embarrassm­ent like the Philippine­s garbage shipments, is to simply ban the export of waste altogether.

“I’m not sure what the rationale for transporti­ng our waste around the globe is because it’s certainly not good for the environmen­t,” said Hird.

More than 85 per cent of plastic waste produced in Canada ends up in landfills, and about nine per cent is destined for recycling facilities. Hird says even recycling plastics comes with a significan­t environmen­tal cost, with the distances they are shipped and the pollution produced in melting them down.

“Recycling has become sort of emblematic of being a good environmen­tal citizen,” she said.

“The problem is it doesn’t do what people think it does. It’s not a solution to the generation of waste.”

Canadians are among the biggest producers of waste in the world, churning out as much as two kilograms per person every day. It is one of the highest percapita rates among developed countries. Almost half the plastic waste produced in Canada is from packaging, everything from water bottles and take-out containers to plastic wrap and clamshells for cheap electronic­s.

Jamie Kaminski, a board member at Zero Waste Canada, said Canada needs to make a massive shift away from single-use packaging to refillable­s.

“Everything we’re doing has to be shifted to reusable packaging,” he said.

He said it won’t be a simple change, since our supply chains are so dominated by single-use plastic containers, but it’s doable.

“We put a man on the moon,” said Kaminski.

Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna is planning to unveil a national strategy to curb plastic use next month but earlier this year her office indicated a reluctance to enact any limits on exports of plastic waste.

Cracking down on plastic production is not without its critics. Conservati­ve MP Marilyn Gladu said in question period Friday that the government attacked the oil industry and “now they are threatenin­g a war on plastics.”

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