Bangkok Post

Waste plastic imports ‘to be banned’

Bid to crack down on trash management

- APINYA WIPATAYOTI­N

Authoritie­s plan to ban the import of all electronic and plastic waste next year, in a move to improve garbage management.

The ban was announced by a new subcommitt­ee on the two garbage types, led by National Resources and Environmen­t Minister Varawut Silpaarcha, who yesterday said he was determined to achieve the goal.

“We will ban all imports,” Mr Varawut said after the group’s first meeting yesterday.

However, the minister admitted it will be an uphill task since the drastic measure requires amending the law.

His 29-member subcommitt­ee works under the National Environmen­t Board, chaired by deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon. Among items topping the subcommitt­ee’s agenda is a review of the import quotas for electronic and plastic waste.

Mr Varawut said his group will start by taking a close look at the current import and export of plastic garbage.

“We are considerin­g whether to offset the imports against exports,” he said.

Subcommitt­ee members yesterday set up three working panels, one of which will look into the matter.

The panels will deal with electronic and plastic waste management, plastic garbage usage, and public relations.

“You may be wondering why the subcommitt­ee needs to set up its own subcommitt­ees,” Mr Varawut said.

He explained the panels would use experts to inspect how agencies and the private sector deal with garbage.

The subcommitt­ee also discussed ways to deal with garbage smuggled into Thailand. Mr Varawut expressed concern over a regulation that allows garbage to be sold domestical­ly if it is considered harmless to the environmen­t.

Some of this trash ends up as landfill. “This is not correct,” Mr Varawut said, blaming a loophole in the law for causing what he called inefficien­t garbage management.

Meanwhile, the cabinet on Tuesday approved a ministeria­l law proposed by the Industry Ministry to deal with smuggled electronic scrap.

The law bans factories from using certain types of imported e-waste as raw materials in their manufactur­ing processes, according deputy spokeswoma­n Rachada Dhnadirek.

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