China has set its sights on tackling the environmental danger of
the increasing amount of worn-out electrical appliances.
Wang Ji, an official with the pollution control department of the
State Environmental Protection Administration, noted at a press
conference held by the administration last month that such
discarded electrical appliances would "severely pollute the
environment" without proper disposal.
The administration and the State Economic and Trade Commission are
preparing to jointly release a series of detailed national
regulations on recycling discarded electrical appliances later this
year, according to Wang.
Under the new regulations, recycling networks and pilot disposal
plants would be established in communities around the country over
the next few years to deal with discarded electrical
appliances.
The environmental administration said China discards 60,000 to
100,000 tons of computers each year, along with 30,000 to 50,000
tons of monitors, which are especially polluting.
Around 15 million household electrical appliances - mainly
refrigerators, washing machines and TV sets - are discarded each
year in China, administration officials estimated.
China, which has an abundant workforce, will encourage the manual
disassembly of worn-out household electrical appliances to recycle
more and produce less pollution, said Wang.
Manually dismantling unwanted electrical devices can save 20 to 30
per cent of resources compared with mechanical disassembly,
according to administration experts.
At
another press conference jointly held in Beijing on Friday by the
administration and the State Council Information Office,
Vice-Minister Wang Jirong of the administration also noted that
China will encourage the country's producers of household
electrical appliances to provide more environmentally friendly
products. But she did not mention whether China would follow the
European Union in making manufacturers responsible for disposing of
their worn-out electrical products.
The environmental administration, the General Administration of
Customs, the State General Administration for Quality Supervision
and Inspection and Quarantine will also work out detailed
regulations to ban the import of certain categories of
pollution-causing worn-out electrical appliances, according to the
vice-minister.
In
2000, China issued an import ban covering 11 categories of
discarded electrical devices, including computer monitors,
ohotocopiers, telephones and video cameras.
The environmental administration also recently investigated cases
of mass importing and disposal of electrical waste in Chaoyang in
South China's Guangdong Province and in Taizhou in East China's
Zhejiang Province.
Several small waste-treatment plants in the two provinces were shut
down for illegally processing imports of banned electrical
appliances, according to the environmental administration.
(China Daily June 3, 2002)
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