Plastic crisis looms after China says no to UK waste
Recycling bosses have warned that they will struggle to cope after china imposed a ban on imports of plastic waste.
About half a million tons of plastic a year have been shipped to china by councils and other UK organisations.
But yesterday, china’s government imposed a ban on ‘foreign waste’ as part of its latest drive to upgrade its industries.
The move has raised fears that more waste could be dumped or stockpiled in the UK because of a lack of recycling and waste facilities to process it.
Officials said the government was examining the impact of the move and whether more waste could be recycled in Britain.
But the UK Recycling Association said it had no idea what the short-term solution was. chief executive Simon ellin said: ‘it’s a huge blow, a game-changer for our industry.
‘We’ve relied on china for so long for our waste. We simply don’t have the markets in the UK.’
British firms have shipped more than 2.7million tons of plastic waste to china and Hong Kong since 2012, according to greenpeace.
That amounts to two-thirds of our total plastic waste exports.
councils said the china ban could mean a greater use of incineration.
Peter Fleming, of the local government Association, told the BBC: ‘clearly there’s a part to play for incineration but not all parts of the country have incinerators.’
last year, UK environment Secretary Michael gove said he was considering how to respond to the ban.
He has argued the UK should ‘stop offshoring its dirt’.
Ministers are drawing up plans for a tax on single-use plastics – which would hit disposable cutlery and packaging.
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