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China’s Tug-of-War with Foreign Waste
Article

China’s Tug-of-War with Foreign Waste

Ifanr, 2018

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Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Eye Opening
  • Background
  • Hot Topic

Recommendation

In this punchy article, Xiao Qinpeng – writing for tech media platform Ifanr.com – asks uncomfortable questions about global waste management and globalization. Xiao points out obvious issues of pollution and the risk to public health that arise when one country imports another’s waste. Quoting the documentary Plastic Kingdom by director Wang Jiuliang, he also points to the waste management industry as a reflection of systematic layers of exploitation inherent in globalization. Researchers are developing trash-sorting robots, but until they are ready to take over, other countries will take China’s place and thus pollute and poison their own land and people. getAbstract recommends this story to anyone curious about how trash travels around the world. 

Take-Aways

  • Waste that is troublesome for nations such as Japan and the United States to process  can be a profitable business.  China alone currently handles 56% of the world’s waste.
  • A historic lack of oversight has led to pollution, poor working conditions and serious health problems in and around the many primitive “trash workshops” that have sprung up in China and other waste-importing countries.
  • In 2017, China decided to ban the import of certain types of waste.

About the Author

Xiao Qinpeng has a regular column on lifestyle and tech at Ifanr.com, a multimedia site for the latest international and domestic reports on tech.