Australia targets trash-burning plants and recycling in face of China rubbish ban
SYDNEY: Australia will invest in trash-burning incinerators and aim for all packaging to be 100 percent recycled by 2025 after China, which took one third of the country’s rubbish, banned waste imports, its environment minister said on Friday.
The Chinese ban from March 1 affects 1.25 million tonnes of Australian waste, worth an estimated A$ 850 million ( US$ 640 million), according to governmentcommissioned research by consultancy Blue Environment.
Environment Minister Josh Frydenberg said he had directed government funding bodies to “prioritise” waste-to- energy projects, which include incinerators and landfill gas harvesting.
“Obviously we’d like to see waste reused or recycled, primarily, but waste-to- energy is a legitimate source of generation,” Frydenberg told reporters in Melbourne.
Recycling is a A$ 5 billion industry in Australia, according to research firm IBISWorld.
In Australia about 30 waste-toenergy projects are operational, mostly confined to small incinerators and co-generation plants, though a handful of larger projects are on the drawing board. A public backlash due to pollution fears saw a major project in Sydney stall in 2018. China, the world’s biggest importer of plastic waste, has stopped accepting shipments of rubbish, such as plastic and paper, as part of a campaign against “foreign garbage”.
The ban has upended the world’s waste handling supply chain and caused massive pile-ups of trash from Asia to Europe, as exporters struggled to find new buyers for the garbage. Governments in Britain and the European Union have focused on boosting recycling rates in response to the Chinese ban, the British introducing a deposit return scheme for plastic bottles and the EU mulling a plastic tax. — Reuters