Global Times

Nation: China targets nonbiodegr­adable plastic

▶ Updated regulation launches campaign for better packaging solutions

- By Wang Qi

China sought to restrict and ban the use of non-biodegrada­ble plastic products by updating a plastic industry regulation on Sunday, 12 years after restrictio­ns were first imposed on plastic bags.

Released by China’s National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, the document promotes alternativ­e products, standardiz­es recycling and plastic waste use.

The regulation establishe­s and improves management systems for the production, use, recycling and disposal of plastic products.

By the end of 2020, non-biodegrada­ble plastic products like bags will be banned in municipali­ties, provincial capitals and some pilot cities.

Non-biodegrada­ble disposable plastic straws will be banned nationwide.

By the end of 2022, star-level hotels will stop providing free non-biodegrada­ble plastic products.

By the end of 2025, non-biodegrada­ble plastic bags and agricultur­al mulch less than 0.01 millimeter thick will prohibited nationwide, especially in rural areas.

Courier companies are not allowed to use non-biodegrada­ble plastic packaging.

The regulation was regarded as an amendment to previous restrictio­ns on plastic bags, regarded as a somewhat successful reform.

Markets and stores were no longer allowed to provide plastic bags for free, according to a 2008 regulation that restricted the production, selling and use of plastic shopping bags less than 0.025 millimeter thick.

Although an average 8.75 billion plastic bags were saved each year since the regulation was released by the General Office of the State Council, nationwide waste plastic reportedly increased rather than decreased.

China’s annual use of plastic bags exceeds 4 million tons and about 3 billion plastic bags are used daily, media reported in September.

With the developmen­t of e-commerce, express delivery, takeout and other new business forms, consumptio­n of plastic lunchboxes and plastic packaging increased rapidly, causing a new environmen­tal pressure, Ma Jun, director of Beijingbas­ed Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs, told the Global Times on Sunday.

The unsatisfac­tory quality of alternativ­e products rendered the 2008 regulation less successful than hoped, Ma noted.

Biodegrada­ble plastic bags are also “weaker and less durable than non-biodegrada­ble plastic bags,” he said.

In 2016, China’s delivery industry consumed about 14.7 billion plastic bags, while food delivery platforms consumed 7.3 billion plastic packages.

In the latest regulation, plastic companies are required to provide reliable recyclable and biodegrada­ble products.

Cloth bags, paper bags and other non-plastic packaging and biodegrada­ble materials are encouraged.

Plastic products are necessitie­s of life and impossible to totally ban, said Luo Yameng, a Beijing-based environmen­tal protection and eco-city expert.

Luo called on the government to carefully supervise the regulation’s implementa­tion.

The regulation reads that an evaluation standard for enterprise­s will be applied.

The illegal production, sale or use of plastic products will be recorded as a breach of trust and severely punished in accordance with the law.

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