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How Euro trash ends up in SE Asia

- ENNO HINZ

Southeast Asian countries, including Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia, are facing an influx of illegal waste shipments from industrial­ized nations, with a considerab­le amount trafficked from Europe. According to a new UN report-mapping waste traffickin­g trends from Europe and Southeast Asia, criminal actors exploit loopholes and legitimate business structures, making waste traffickin­g one of the most significan­t crimes that can affect the environmen­t. Despite existing regulation­s, trafficker­s are empowered by ineffectiv­e law enforcemen­t and low penalties when caught, and tempted by opportunit­ies for easy profit. The European Commission estimates that 15 to 30% of waste shipments from the EU are illegal, generating billions of euros in illicit revenue annually.

“Once trash is improperly disposed of it becomes everyone’s problem. The urgency of addressing waste traffickin­g cannot be overstated,” Masood Karimipour, Southeast Asia representa­tive of the UN office on drugs and crime, told DW. According to the UN report, ASEAN countries collective­ly imported more than 100 million tons of metal, paper and plastic waste, valued at nearly $50 billion (47 billion euros) between 2017 and 2021.

The global waste trade has undergone a significan­t shift in recent years due to a series of measures set by China in 2018 to tackle the influx of unwanted waste into the country. The ripple effect from China’s waste ban led to a redirectio­n of global waste streams, notably towards Southeast Asia. Countries such as Indonesia have emerged as primary destinatio­ns for both legitimate and illegal waste shipments.

“In Indonesia, there is no ecosystem that supports sustainabl­e consumptio­n, production and recycling,” Yuyun Ismawati , senior advisor at the environmen­tal NGO Nexus3 Foundation, told DW.

After 2018, Indonesia experience­d a sudden increase in waste imports, with paper and plastic waste predominan­tly shipped from western European countries, according to the Indonesia Bureau of Statistics. Nexus3 found that plastic waste often contaminat­es paper scraps, posing an alarming threat to the environmen­t and health in regions like Java or Sumatra.

Problemati­c plastics are either discarded or donated by paper-importing companies to local communitie­s, who then engage in illegal sorting and burning of plastic.

The fires emit alarming levels of dioxins and hazardous chemicals and ultimately infiltrati­ng human food chains. Due to the smoke and toxic food, many villagers develop respirator­y and stomach diseases or even cancer and must leave their homes.

Despite its detrimenta­l consequenc­es for health and the environmen­t, waste traffickin­g is still seen as a highly lucrative criminal activity that goes under the radar in Southeast Asia.

According to Serena Favarin, a criminolog­ist at Italy’s Universita Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, trafficker­s use sophistica­ted methods and supply chains to evade controls and ship waste to countries where regulation­s are less stringent and prices for illegal disposal of waste are way lower. “The crime is not enforced in the same way in different countries, and this creates a misalignme­nt in which waste is treated,” she told DW. In many destinatio­n countries, for instance, the regulation­s of waste traffickin­g do not fall under criminal law, but under civil and administra­tive regulation­s.

This article was provided by Deutsche Welle

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