Paris (AFP) - Several Southeast Asian countries, sick of being the wealthy world's rubbish dump, have in recent weeks turned back container-loads of waste from foreign shores.
It comes
after China last year stopped accepting the world's used plastic, having
previously been the biggest market for recyclables.
After
Indonesia on Tuesday announced it had sent back illegally imported garbage from
France and Hong Kong, here is a roundup.
China
On January
1, 2018, China closed its doors to almost all foreign plastic waste, as well as
many other recyclables, in a push to protect its environment and air quality.
For many
years China had received the bulk of scrap plastic from around the world,
processing much of it into a higher quality material that could be used by
manufacturers.
Beijing's
decision forced developed countries to find new destinations for plastics that
are either "of poor quality and value" or not recyclable, the
non-governmental group Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA)
said.
It led to
enormous quantities of waste being redirected to Southeast Asia, where
recycling capacities are more limited.
Malaysia
In late May
Malaysia said 450 tonnes of contaminated plastic waste would be shipped back to
where it came from -- Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, China, Japan, Saudi Arabia
and the United States.
The country
however does allow the import of homogenous and clean waste plastics for the
recycling industry.
"We
urge developed countries to stop shipping garbage to our country," said
government minister Yeo Bee Yin.
Philippines
In late
June the Philippines returned to Canada tonnes of rubbish held in 69 containers
that had been in the Asian country for six years.
It put an
end to a row dating back to 2013 and 2014 when a Canadian company shipped
containers mislabelled as recyclable plastics to the Philippines.
The
shipment actually contained a mixture of paper, plastics, electronics and
household waste, including kitchen trash and diapers.
Some of the
waste was disposed of in the Philippines, but much of it stewed in local ports
for years.
Cambodia
In July
Cambodia said it would send back to the United States and Canada 1,600 tonnes
of illegal plastic waste found in shipping containers.
Seventy of
the containers, stored at the southern port town of Sihanoukville, came from
the United States and 13 from Canada.
Sri Lanka
Also in
July, Sri Lankan customs ordered the return to Britain of 111 containers abandoned
in Colombo port for nearly two years and found to be holding hazardous mortuary
and clinical waste, possibly including human organs.
The
containers, discovered after they emanated a huge stink, were illegally
imported from Britain under the cover of metal recycling.
Of 241
dodgy containers imported since 2017, 130 had been taken to a free-trade zone
near the port where they have contaminated the water and air.
Indonesia
In late
July Indonesia returned seven containers of illegally imported waste to France
and Hong Kong from its Batam island port. They were loaded with a combination
of garbage, plastic waste and hazardous materials.
Authorities
were still waiting for clearance to return another 42 containers of waste at
the port to the United States, Australia and Germany.
Earlier the
same month the country said it would send more than 210 tonnes of garbage back
to Australia.
The rubbish
was in eight containers seized in Surabaya that should have contained only
waste paper but were found to include household trash such as plastic bottles
and packaging, used diapers, electronic waste and cans.
In June
Indonesia returned five containers of rubbish to the United States.
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