China Enacts Massive, Speedy Single-Use Plastics Ban
Posted in: UncategorizedWithin a relatively short timespan, historically speaking, China outpaced the U.S. in manufacturing–and paid a heavy environmental price. But now it appears they’re addressing that issue, and are subsequently poised to dwarf us in another area. Surprisingly, that area is sustainability.
New policies laid out by China’s National Development and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Ecology and Environment are determined to phase out single-use plastics, with an ambitious timeline that would be just about impossible in countries without totalitarian rule.
On the usage side:
– Plastic bags will be banned in all major cities by the end of 2020
– Single-use straws in restaurants will be banned by the end of 2020
On the production side:
– Manufacturing/sale of plastic bags less than 0.025mm thick (i.e. shopping bags) banned by the end of 2020
– Manufacturing/sale of plastic film less than 0.01mm thick (i.e. for agricultural use) banned by the end of 2020
– Manufacturing/sale of disposable foam, plastic tableware and cotton-tipped swabs banned by the end of 2020
Photo by Magda Ehlers from Pexels
Additionally, the import of all plastic waste (apparently some was still sneaking through) is now completely banned.
Cities, which are where the majority of China’s citizens (over 55%, according to the Associated Press) now live, will be hit the hardest. Towns and rural areas will have a bit longer to comply with the new rules, with their targets set for 2025.
So what about the massive amounts of plastic waste they’ve already got piled up? Reuters reports that “China is already boosting recycling rates and is building dozens of ‘comprehensive resource utilization’ bases to ensure that more products are reused as part of its war on waste,” although the Chinese government has not gone into specifics.
China is currently the world’s #1 producer of plastic (according to CNN) and unsurprisingly, the world’s #1 producer of plastic waste (according to the University of Oxford). For China to undertake such drastic steps to reverse, at least, the latter, is noteworthy enough that even difficult-to-please Greenpeace has re-Tweeted it.
Sources: AP, BBC, CNN, EcoWatch, Reuters, University of Oxford, Taipei Times
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