Back in 2008, Beijing introduced a nationwide ban on ultra-thin plastic bags in a bid to tame the plastics menace that had earned the nation the reputation as the world’s largest generator of waste and also the largest source of waste plastic flowing into our oceans. But more than a decade since the policy was unveiled, use of these banned ultra-thin bags is still rampant, including in Jilin Province, home to the country’s strictest restrictions on plastic bags.
And now, Beijing intends to phase in a raft of new anti-plastic regulations as early as the end of 2020.
Beijing plans to ban/prohibit the usage of non-degradable plastic bags in stages. By the end of the current year, Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, Chongqing—aka the Four Municipalities—will prohibit usage of non-degradable plastic bags (thicker bags above 25 microns are assumed to be included) in supermarkets, shopping malls, pharmacies, catering packaging, bookstores, and various exhibition conferences. Restaurants will also be banned from using single-use straws by the end of 2020.
By the end of 2022, the bans will be extended to all regions above the prefecture-level as well as in coastal counties before extending out to smaller regions by the end of 2025. Prefectures in China refer to cities that rank below a province but above a county.
Unfortunately, while well-meaning, the latest initiative is unlikely to be succesful given the host of challenges it’s about to come up against.
Lack of suitable initiatives
The 2008 plastic ban is by no means the only such venture attempted by the world’s largest user of plastics.
In 2013, China introduced the “Green Fence” operation designed in part to improve the quality of the plastics waste coming into the country. Then two years ago, Beijing followed that up with the launch of the “National Sword Campaign” that effectively banned the importation of plastic scrap from other regions. Under the new policy, domestic recycling facilities were placed under strict supervision, with their licenses either canceled or suspended for non-compliance.
The National Sword Campaign proved to be a resounding success, with China’s total polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) plastic waste imports tumbling 99% just a year after the ban as per the Global Trade Atlas (GTA).
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Suddenly, China was no longer the world’s favorite plastics dumping ground, especially for western nations. The U.S. and EU produce more plastics per capita than any other region in the world, yet their recycling industries remain grossly underdeveloped.
Since 1992, China has been importing nearly half of the world’s recyclables and waste, with EU plastic exports to the Middle Kingdom peaking at 300,000 tonnes per month.