A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, May 31, 2019
Poorer countries refusing plastic waste imports could make the system fairer
THE world generated 242 million tonnes of plastic waste in 2016 – a figure that’s expected to grow by 70 percent in
the next 30 years. But this same plastic is also a commodity that’s
sold and traded in a global industry that generates US$200 billion every
year.
Exporting plastic waste is one-way rich countries dispose of their
waste. By selling waste to firms that then send it to countries where
recycling costs are cheaper, rich countries can avoid the unpleasant
task of finding somewhere at home to dispose of it. Unfortunately, most
of this waste is shipped to countries that aren’t equipped to properly manage it.
When wealthy countries export their plastic waste to poorer countries with weaker recycling capacity, those plastics are often dumped,
eventually polluting the land and sea. But a recent UN decision could
help those countries most affected by plastic litter and with the least
capacity to manage it. Due to a little-known treaty called the Basel
Convention, poorer countries can now say no to the deluge of exported
waste.
An enduring injustice
The Basel Convention was adopted by the UN in 1989 to manage the flow of
toxic waste sent from rich to poor countries. It’s cheaper for wealthy
countries to relocate their waste to areas with lower costs and
oversight, and so opportunities to abuse the system emerge.
Italian waste management firms made headlines in 1988 because they stored hazardous wastes in a Nigerian fishing village, in drums labelled as building materials. For years Canada delayed repatriating waste – including nappies – dumped by a Canadian firm in the Philippines. The refuse has been sitting in the sun there since 2013.
The images of plastic waste piling up on beaches in many developing countries, including on some of the world’s most remote islands, prompted an effort led by Norway to use the Basel Convention for its original purpose.
Norway brought forward a proposal to change how the treaty regulates
plastics, by moving many types of plastics from the “non-hazardous”
category to a list of wastes “of special concern.”
Starting in 2020, this will require developing countries to be informed
if these plastics are in a waste shipment. With this information,
countries can give, or revoke, their “prior informed consent”. For the
first time, developing countries can refuse a shipment of plastics with
the backing of international law.
Making the recycling industry fairer
This decision only applies to low-value, hard-to-recycle plastics. Think
of food packaging or single-use water bottles: the plastics are soiled
or mixed together (the lid, label, and bottle are different types of
plastic), making them difficult to recycle. Most recyclers don’t want
these plastics, which don’t generate a profit and increasingly are
dumped in the landfills of poor countries.
Research shows how
cheap plastics leach persistent organic pollutants into the environment
– a particularly nasty group of chemicals that are toxic, travel
through air and water over long distances, accumulate in animal tissue
(including humans), and last a long time. More than 233 marine species have ingested plastic and litter has reached the deepest parts of the ocean.
The trade in global plastics is one driver of this problem, so giving
developing countries the right to know what is entering their country
and to refuse it is an appropriate solution to waste dumping.
China, previously the world’s largest importer of plastics for recycling, banned the import of cheap and contaminated plastics in 2018, displacing plastic waste to
other countries. China’s neighbours, such as Indonesia, and Malaysia,
shouldered a heavier burden, particularly since countries like the UK continue to export over 600,000 tonnes of plastica year.
Rich countries tend to produce the most plastic waste in the world per person and
have better systems for managing it. If cheap and easy routes for
dumping plastics close, wealthier countries may have to find ways to
compel recycling companies to deal with their cheap plastics
domestically.
This agreement is only the start, but it could empower poorer countries
to refuse the deluge of plastics that ultimately end up lingering on
their shores. In time, it may help redress some of the burning
injustices in the global waste trade.
Jen Allan, Lecturer in Environmental Politics, Cardiff University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.