China no longer wants US plastic waste. What now? – China Won't Accept US Plastic Waste. Now What?
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Published on: March 4, 2019 / Updated on: March 4, 2019 – Author: Konrad Wolfenstein
US plastic exports to China plummeted by 92 percent between the first half of 2017 and the first half of 2018. Hong Kong's plastic waste imports from the US also declined significantly during the same period, falling by 77 percent.
According to Wired , the plastic spillover caused by the ban is being sent to outdated incinerators or landfills. For cities and smaller towns, incinerating their recyclables is one of the last resorts for waste disposal, as foreign exports have been reduced.
Recycling through incineration poses numerous problems for the environment and the communities surrounding these incinerators. The incinerators are not equipped with modern pollution reduction mechanisms, such as scrubbers on chimneys. As a result, burning these plastics releases harmful dioxins into the air—compounds associated with an increased risk of cancer and asthma. The communities surrounding many of these incinerators and landfills are predominantly Black and Latino, who are at higher risk of exposure to the negative effects of these pollutants.
US plastic waste exports to China plummeted by 92 percent between the first part of 2017 and the first part of 2018. Hong Kong's plastic waste imports from the US also dropped significantly over the same time period, dipping by 77 percent.
According to reporting done by the Wired , plastic spillover caused by the ban is being sent to aging incinerators or dumped in landfills. For cities and smaller localities, burning their recycling is a last-ditch effort to dispose of the waste, since foreign exports have been cut back.
Burning recycling poses many problems for the environment and the communities that surround these incinerators. The incinerators have not been outfitted with up-to-date pollution reducing mechanisms, like scrubbers on smoke stacks. Due to that issue, setting these plastics on fire releases harmful dioxins into the air, compounds that are linked to increased risks for cancer and asthma. Largely, the communities that surround many of these incinerators and dumping sites are black and Latino residents, who are at a higher exposure risk to the adverse effects of these pollutants.























