Every year, around five million tonnes of used plastic are shipped internationally, with the vast majority (71%) coming from just 10 high-income countries. While these exports are often presented as a recycling solution, a report by CleanHub reveals a more troubling truth.
Plastic
waste exports are containers of plastic refuse that are shipped across the
oceans for processing abroad. The plastic is sent on cargo ships that can
transport hundreds of tonnes at a time, providing a way for countries to
offload unmanageable waste while importing recyclable materials to produce new
products.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org
1.
Germany: 688,067
tonnes
2.
Japan: 606,374
tonnes
3.
United
Kingdom: 600,000 tonnes
4.
Netherlands: 576,702
tonnes
5.
United
States: 431,841 tonnes
6.
Belgium: 391,263
tonnes
7.
France: 344,367
tonnes
8.
Italy: 205,621
tonnes
9.
Canada: 201,780
tonnes
10. Austria: 174,976 tonnes
Collectively, these top 10 countries export more than 4.4 million tonnes of plastic waste per year, representing 71% of all plastic waste exports. Additionally, all these exporters are high-income, developed nations - with seven of them in Europe.
Despite the large export figures, many nations have reduced their plastic waste exports over the past year – notably the US by 28%, and Germany by 6%. Compared to European countries such as the UK and France, the US is shown to be better at handling its own plastic waste. Meanwhile, Japan and Canada's exports have increased by 7% and 10%, respectively. Exports from the Netherlands have shot up by 69% in the past four years.
The problem is that highly developed countries like Japan and the US are exporting their plastic waste rather than investing in proper domestic recycling or reduction strategies. Whilst this allows them to maintain a lower carbon footprint on paper and portray them as countries progressing towards net-zero goals, the environmental and ethical consequences are much more significant.
By sending the waste to other, less-economically developed nations for recycling, the burden is off-loaded.
Top 10 countries ranked by most waste imported per year:
1.
Netherlands: 796,234
tonnes
2.
Turkey: 622,781
tonnes
3.
Germany: 503,268
tonnes
4.
United
States: 446,831 tonnes
5.
Vietnam: 378,944
tonnes
6.
Malaysia: 351,284
tonnes
7.
Belgium: 282,980
tonnes
8.
Austria: 245,079
tonnes
9.
Czechia: 203,853
tonnes
10.
Indonesia: 194,130
tonnes
Despite some wealthier nations like the Netherlands, US and Austria recently increased their imports, the burden of managing this waste still falls disproportionately. Building domestic recycling infrastructure requires significant investment. Therefore, it's often cheaper and easier to offload the shipping waste to developing nations, especially when exchange rates are favourable.
This imbalance incentivises wealthier countries to prioritise short-term cost savings over long-term solutions and environmental responsibility. The brunt of this plastic waste trade falls on developing nations like Vietnam, Malaysia, and Turkey - most of which lack the infrastructure and resources to handle the influx of waste effectively.
According
to the CleanHub report, plastic waste exports impact the environment through:
· Ocean
pollution: 5% of ocean plastic pollution comes from mismanaged waste
exports. This translates to roughly 635,000 tonnes of bottles, bags,
plates, and other waste forms.
·
Country
pollution: Exported plastic waste is routinely dumped and burned illegally,
causing a grim fate for the land. These practices release toxic chemical
pollutants into the air and water supplies, posing a serious threat
to both the surrounding environment and people living in these areas. This
figure will only rise in the coming decades if better plastic disposal
techniques are enforced.
· Air pollution: The transportation of plastic waste across large distances also contributes to the problem. Ships transport 11 billion tonnes per year, which produces 706 million tonnes of CO2, the five million tonnes of plastic waste itself contribute an additional 320,900 tonnes of CO2 emissions each year.
Whilst there must be consequences for mismanaging plastic waste exports, they should fall on the wealthier nations attempting to abdicate the responsibility through exportation means. By coming together, wealthier nations can provide the financial and strategic support that poorer countries urgently need to build robust waste management infrastructure.
Reference:
Top 10 countries responsible for most exported plastic waste, Rebekah Jordan, Interplas Insights, 13 May 2024
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