Toronto Star

The world’s big ecological headache in just one word: Plastics

After China’s ban on waste imports, ‘bottleneck­s’ of trash in Canada and elsewhere underscore the need for more recycling options

- KIMIKO DE FREYTAS-TAMURA THE NEW YORK TIMES

LONDON— Ever since China announced last year that it no longer wanted to be the “world’s garbage dump,” recycling about half the globe’s plastics and paper products, Western nations have been puzzling over what to do when the ban went into effect, which it did on Jan. 1.

The answer, to date, in Britain at least, is nothing. At least one waste disposal site in London is already seeing a buildup of plastic recyclable­s and has had to pay to have some of it removed.

Similar backups have been reported in Canada, Ireland, Germany and several other European nations, while tons of rubbish is piling up in port cities such as Hong Kong.

Steve Frank, of Pioneer Recycling in Oregon, owns two plants that collect and sort 220,000 tons of recyclable materials each year. A majority of it was, until recently, exported to China. “My inventory is out of control,” he said.

China’s ban, Frank said, has caused “a major upset of the flow of global recyclable­s.” Now, he hopes to export waste to countries such as Indonesia, India, Vietnam, Malaysia — “anywhere we can” — but “they can’t make up the difference.”

In Britain, Jacqueline O’Donovan, managing director of the British waste disposal firm O’Donovan Waste Disposal, said that “the market has completely changed” since China’s decision went into effect. Her company collects and disposes about 70,000 tons of plastic trash every year, she said, and expects “huge bottleneck­s across the whole of England” in the coming months.

Britain’s prime minister, Theresa May, pledged Thursday to eliminate avoidable wastes within 25 years. In a prepared speech, she urged supermarke­ts to introduce plastic-free aisles where all the food is loose.

The European Union, for its part, plans to propose a tax on plastic bags and packaging, citing the China ban and the health of the oceans among other reasons.

Those measures might help ease the situation some day, but for now Britain is faced with growing piles of recyclable­s and no place to put them. Experts say the immediate response to the crisis may well be to turn to incinerati­on or landfills — both harmful to the environmen­t.

China’s ban covers imports of 24 kinds of solid waste, including unsorted paper and the low-grade polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate used in plastic bottles, as part of a broad cleanup effort and a campaign against “yang laji,” or “foreign garbage.” It also sets new limits on the levels of impurities in other recyclable­s.

China had been processing at least half the world’s exports of waste paper, metals and used plastic — 7.3 million tons in 2016, according to recent industry data. In July, China notified the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) that it intended to ban some imports of trash, saying the action was needed to protect the environmen­t and improve public health.

“Large amounts of dirty wastes or even hazardous wastes are mixed in the solid waste that can be used as raw materials,” Beijing wrote to the WTO. “This polluted China’s environmen­t seriously.”

Chinese officials also complained that much of the recyclable material the country received from overseas had not been properly cleaned or was mixed with nonrecycla­ble materials.

The sudden move has left Western countries scrambling to deal with a buildup of plastic and paper garbage while looking for new markets for the waste.

“It’s not just a U.K. problem,” said Simon Ellin, chief executive of the Recycling Associatio­n in Britain. “The rest of the world is thinking, ‘What can we do?’ It’s tough times.”

In Halifax, which sent 80 per cent of its recycling to China, Matthew Keliher, the city’s manager of solid waste, said he had largely found alternativ­es to accept plastic, except for the lowgrade plastic film that is used to make shopping bags and for wrapping. Stockpiles of those plastics have so exceeded the city’s storage capacity that Halifax had to get special permission to bury about 300 metric tons of the material in a landfill.

In Calgary, which sent 50 per cent of its plastics and 100 per cent of its mixed papers to China, the material is being stockpiled in empty storage sheds, shipping containers, trailers and warehouses since last fall. So far, 5,000 tons have been collected, Sharon Howland, the city’s lead manager of waste and recycling services, told the CBC.

“The material are a sellable resource, so we will store them as long as we can and evaluate our options from there,” she said.

In Britain, even the political class appeared caught by surprise. When asked in front of lawmakers about the impending ban last month, Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove fumbled: “I don’t know what impact it will have. It is something to which — I will be completely honest — I have not given sufficient thought.”

Pollution from plastics has captured global attention in recent years. A new David Attenborou­gh series on the BBC, Blue Planet II, has shown plastic bags and bottles clogging oceans and killing fish, turtles and other marine wildlife, prompting government­s to put in place more stringent rules.

Every year, Britain sends China enough recyclable­s to fill up 10,000 Olympicsiz­ed swimming pools, according to Greenpeace U.K. The United States exports more than 13.2 million tons of scrap paper and 1.42 million tons of scrap plastics annually to China, the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries has reported. That is the sixth-largest American export to China.

“There may be alternativ­e markets, but they’re not ready today,” said Emmanuel Katrakis, of the European Recycling Industries’ Confederat­ion.

Katrakis dismissed China’s claims that all imported scrap waste contained high levels of contaminan­ts, and said that Beijing’s thresholds for most types of scrap were “far more demanding” than in Europe or the United States. He also said Europe has focused too much on collecting plastic waste and shipping it out, and not enough on encouragin­g manufactur­ers to use it in new products.

“We’ve got to start producing less and we’ve got to produce better-quality recyclable goods,” Ellin said.

Too often, he said, manufactur­ers produce environmen­tally harmful products and then “pass the buck” to retailers, who in turn pass it to local councils to pick up the tab to sort out the waste for recycling.

“What’s happened is that the final link in the supply chain has turned around and said: ‘No, we’re not going to take this poor-quality stuff anymore. Keep it for yourself.’

“The contaminat­ion can no longer be more than 0.5 per cent,” he said, referring to the stringent levels that China has imposed on some of the materials that it hasn’t banned so far.

Is plastic waste from overseas “the reason why you can’t see blue skies in China?” he asked. “I don’t think so. Go fight the big battles, not the small battles.”

“The final link in the supply chain has turned around and said: ‘No, we’re not going to take this poor-quality stuff anymore.’ ” SIMON ELLIN CEO, RECYCLING ASSOCIATIO­N

 ?? LAM YIK FEI/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Before its ban, China had been processing at least half the world’s exports of waste paper, metals and used plastic.
LAM YIK FEI/THE NEW YORK TIMES Before its ban, China had been processing at least half the world’s exports of waste paper, metals and used plastic.
 ?? DARREN CALABRESE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Compressed recyclable materials are stacked at the Dufferin Waste Management facility in Toronto. In Calgary, which sent 50 per cent of its plastics to China, the material is being stockpiled.
DARREN CALABRESE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Compressed recyclable materials are stacked at the Dufferin Waste Management facility in Toronto. In Calgary, which sent 50 per cent of its plastics to China, the material is being stockpiled.
 ?? JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Limes are packaged in plastic in south London. Pollution from plastics has captured global attention in recent years.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Limes are packaged in plastic in south London. Pollution from plastics has captured global attention in recent years.

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