China Daily

Green body to manage medical waste work

- By LIU YUKUN liuyukun@chinadaily.com.cn

The China Energy Conservati­on and Environmen­tal Protection Group is stepping up efforts in handling coronaviru­s medical waste to avoid secondary infections as part of its battle against the epidemic.

The move aligns with the call from the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t earlier this month to ensure an efficient handling of medical waste and to pay attention to key steps including the collection, classifica­tion and transporta­tion of those materials.

For the epidemic epicenter of Hubei and its surroundin­g areas, the group has asked its branches in Xiaogan, Jingzhou and Xinyang to upgrade medical waste packaging and strengthen supervisio­n in their transporta­tion, recording and handling.

The group also cooperated with local government­s to guarantee smooth transporta­tion of medical waste as many roads have been blocked to prevent the contagion from spreading.

The group’s subsidiary, CECEP

Environmen­tal Protection Equipment Co Ltd, also ramped up production of related equipment to increase medical waste handling capacity in severely-stricken areas.

Lei Ming, executive director and general manager of CECEP Ecotech Co Ltd, the subsidiary specializi­ng in medical waste treatment under the China Energy Conservati­on and Environmen­tal Protection Group, said the company has managed to handle all medical waste they received on the same day the waste was generated to avoid secondary infections.

At this time, the company has two ways to handle coronaviru­s medical waste: burning or heating the material to disinfect it, Lei said.

“For medical waste generated from the novel coronaviru­s, the safest way to handle it is to burn the waste at a temperatur­e of 850 degrees Celsius in an oven that has good emission treatment systems to ensure the emitted gas and fogs will not harm the environmen­t or people,” Lei said.

Although the coronaviru­s medical waste-handling procedures are similar to normal medical waste, the former has stricter requiremen­ts for its collection and transporta­tion and making sure the work staff’s prevention equipment includes protective goggles and face masks, Lei added.

The subsidiary has decided to double the packaging layers for coronaviru­s medical waste and has specially designed recycling boxes. The company also disinfects storage boxes and vehicles before their transporta­tion.

The subsidiary group started its emergency response plan on Jan 24. From Jan 25 to Feb 23, the company has handled 4,447 metric tons of medical waste, of which 484.76 tons were related to the novel coronaviru­s.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Workers disinfect medical waste transferri­ng boxes in a factory under CECEP in Xiaogan, Hubei province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Workers disinfect medical waste transferri­ng boxes in a factory under CECEP in Xiaogan, Hubei province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong