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Young
children in a Shanghai residential community sort their
family garbage according to labels on the dustbins.
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The
Asuwei Integrated Garbage Treatment Center is the first
methane power project in Beijing.
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The
new environmentally friendly shopping bags offered in Chinese
supermarkets are welcomed by consumers.
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IN Ganbai residential courtyard in Beijings Dongcheng District,
four dustbins bearing distinctive labels are lined up side by
side: kitchen leftovers, recyclable rubbish,
batteries and other waste. More than half
of the capitals residential communities now sort rubbish
in this way.
As the Chinese economy grows, garbage disposal becomes an ever
more pressing environmental issue. Though the government has invested
a huge amount of capital in building new garbage disposal plants,
the treatment of refuse still cannot keep up with the amount of
waste being generated. As a result, the Chinese people have been
compelled to seek new garbage treatment methods.
The sorting of waste allows recycled rubbish to be used as raw
material in renewable resource processing plants. Non-recyclable
waste is sent to garbage disposal plants, where advanced technology
is used to treat it and produce energy. By these means, China
is beginning to tackle its immense garbage disposal problem.
Classified Garbage Collection
Mrs. Zhang Mei lives in Beijings Ganbai residential community.
In the corner of her kitchen sits a half-meter-high plastic bin
for kitchen leftovers. A large plastic bag hangs on the wall to
collect recyclable waste, including paper, plastic, rubber, metal
and glass objects. In another corner sits a dustbin for non-recyclable
waste such as cigarette butts and dust. Sorting rubbish may seem
like a complicated process, but the continued efforts of community
workers over the past two years have seen residents slowly falling
into the habit. Educational efforts have included handing out
leaflets providing guidance on rubbish classification and organizing
visits to garbage disposal plants.
Not long ago, Zhang Mei joined one of the excursions organized
by her neighborhood committee to several waste processing operations.
She kept note of what one of the technicians said: 700 kg of recyclable
raw material can be extracted from 1 ton of plastic soft drink
bottles; 900 kg of iron can be extracted from 1 ton of waste iron;
and 850 kg of recycled paper can be made from one ton of waste
paper. This represents a significant reduction in air and water
pollution, as well as a saving of resources.
Now in her late 30s, Zhang Mei recalls that there was no refuse
treatment in Beijing during her youth. At that time she lived
in a one-story house where all rubbish was placed in a basin.
Waste then mainly comprised coal ashes, vegetable leaves and dust.
Basins were emptied onto open ground each day shortly before dusk,
when a man with a dust-cart would come around and collect the
refuse. As more and more high-rises were constructed in Chinas
cities, rubbish chutes were installed in stairwells, so residents
no longer had to troop downstairs to dump their garbage. This
was convenient, but the practice saw unsorted waste pile up outside
apartment blocks in smelly, unsanitary mounds.
With the issue of garbage disposal standards, some refuse treatment
plants began to emerge in Chinese cities in the late 1980s. However,
before 1990, less than 2 percent of the nations garbage
was treated in any way. The following decade saw 660 refuse treatment
plants built across China, with a daily handling capacity of 210,000
tons. In the last 10 years, with advanced technology developed
domestically and introduced from abroad, more integrated garbage
plants have appeared that can bury, burn and treat rubbish. Increasingly
Chinese people are not satisfied with garbage simply being disposed
of, and are demanding better recycling facilities. In 2003, all
garbage chutes in Beijing apartment buildings were sealed, and
large bins for different types of garbage were introduced.
Classified garbage collection has now been implemented in 52
percent of Beijings residential communities, but the national
rate is still lower than 10 percent. According to statistics,
recycled waste could save RMB 25 billion every year if it were
properly collected and reused.
Processing plants have also struggled to keep up with ever increasing
demand. Although the daily handling capacity of Chinese plants
increased by 46,800 tons from 2000 to 2005, the percentage of
total garbage treated actually declined from 61 percent to 54
percent. This reflects the larger amounts of rubbish being generated
by Chinas increasingly consumer-driven society.
Recycling
As the consumption habits of Chinese people have changed over
the years, so has their garbage. According to the Chinese Urban
Garbage Disposing Committee, plastic packaging, for example, now
constitutes about 10 percent of urban rubbish. All this packaging
is recyclable.
Petroleum is the raw material used in the production of plastic
bottles, with six tons of petroleum used to produce every ton
of the receptacles. Every year around 150,000 tons of plastic
bottles are thrown away in Beijing alone. To protect the environment
and save resources, Beijing Yingchuang Regenerated Material Co.,
Ltd was established, with the largest production line for making
recycled bottles in Asia. They can handle 160 tons of used bottles
a day. After selection, cleaning, disinfection, crushing and melting,
they are turned into creamy-white plastic cubes. These are then
transformed into new bottles.
Yingchuang receives and treats 60,000 tons of used plastic bottles
annually, representing around 40 percent of the total collected
in the capital each year. According to Yingchuang manager Zhao
Yan, the plants waste processing equipment and technology
have been certified by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and
the International Life Science Institute as safe to produce bottles
for use in food and drug packaging. Furthermore, Yingchuangs
bottles cost seven percent less than other types. Coca- Cola has
already decided to purchase 10,000 tons of Yingchuangs recycled
bottles annually to use in soft drink packaging.
Paper is also a common form of waste, and most Beijing offices
now have paper recycling boxes. Used office documents, newspapers
and packaging are sent to the Beijing No. 7 Paper Mill and other
mills to be converted into recycled paper.
Food leftovers are another potentially rich source of recycling.
According to statistics, 63 percent of domestic garbage in Beijing
is kitchen leftovers. Four waste food treatment plants have been
built in Beijing, with a daily handling capacity of 1,200 tons.
There are already a few Chinese patents to turn kitchen waste
into organic fertilizer. Biochemical machines using physical or
biochemical technology to turn leftover food into fertilizers
can now be seen in some markets and restaurants, but the cost
of maintaining this equipment has limited its widespread adoption.
Generating Energy from Waste
So what happens to Beijings unsorted garbage? First it
is transported to dumping stations where it is sorted by workers,
before going on to rubbish transfer centers where it is sorted
into further categories by machines. Fans are used to extract
plastic bags, magnets pull out scrap metal, and sieves of different
sizes separate out organic waste to be taken to fertilizing plants.
The inorganic waste left at the end of this process is taken away
to be buried or burned.
With an massive national annual garbage mountain of 160 million
tons, burying is still the most common means of garbage disposal
in China. However, as land prices increase, the cost of burying
rubbish is also rising. The burning of garbage has thus become
more common.
According to Guo Weidong from the Beijing Municipal Administration
Commission, five garbage treatment pro-jects were built in Beijing
in the mid-1990s with a total investment of over RMB 600 million,
which included capital obtained through World Bank loans, and
capital and equipment provided by Germany. By the end of 2007,
there were 23 refuse treatment facilities in Beijing, including
six garbage transfer centers, four integrated garbage treatment
plants, and 13 landfills, with a total daily treatment capacity
of 10,350 tons. A comprehensive garbage treatment system has been
established in the capital, with the portion of domestic garbage
being treated increasing from 93.8 percent in 2004 to 99 percent
in 2007. In Beijings suburbs, the rates have gone from 33.3
percent to 76 percent over the same period.
The Beijing Asuwei Integrated Garbage Treatment Center is a typical
set-up, that includes four main operations: garbage burying, the
creation of fertilizer, burning and power generation, and methane
power generation. The methane power project was completed and
began formal operation in May 2007, using the world-class Deutz
methane power-generating sets. The project provides power for
17,000 families annually, reducing coal consumption by some 10,000
tons.
Prior to the introduction of this methane power-generating technology,
marsh gas from buried garbage was a big environmental headache
for Beijing authorities. The greenhouse effect of this gas is
21 times that of carbon dioxide, and it can set off explosions,
cause fires and trigger landslides at garbage dumps if not properly
handled. Before the gas was harnessed for power generation, it
was simply burned, causing air pollution and creating large amounts
of carbon dioxide. The power-generating plant is now listed as
a greenhouse control project under the Kyoto Protocol.
Another problem with burying garbage is seeping liquids. This
is mainly organic wastewater with a complicated composition, potentially
of great harm to the environment and human health. The Nanjing
University Pollution Control and Resource Utilization Research
Laboratory has developed seeping liquid filtering and treatment
technology, which helps remove organic content. In the Asuwei
Integrated Garbage Treatment Center, treated seeping liquids are
used to water flowers.
These varied technologies are helping to reduce Chinas
pressing garbage disposal problem, and recycling precious resources
sorely needed to feed the nations booming economy.
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