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Shanghai Talks Trash
Article

Shanghai Talks Trash


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Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Eye Opening
  • Overview
  • Concrete Examples

Recommendation

China is the world’s largest producer of trash. Traditionally, informal trash collectors, often specializing in different kinds of material, have been responsible for keeping recoverable material out of the country’s overflowing landfills. Yet trash in China keeps piling up, and the central government has thus started to take waste management into its own hands by mandating cities to improve their recycling rates. Two reporters from Chinese business magazine Caixin traveled to Shanghai to study how the world’s most populous city is trying to implement an ambitious waste-sorting program. getAbstract recommends their analysis to public policy experts as well as business professionals and environmentalists with an interest in China.

Take-Aways

  • The Chinese government has mandated that the country’s major cities  recycle 35% of collected household waste by 2020.
  • Traditionally, informal waste collectors have been in charge of collecting and recycling household waste in China, with mixed results.
  • Shanghai is experimenting with a new waste-sorting system that has residents sort their trash into categories and employs sanitation workers for trash collection. 

About the Authors

 Teng Jing Xuan and Ge Mingning are reporters for China’s business magazine Caixin.