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Lunch boxes pile up and plastic recycling is difficult: How to deal with takeaway waste?

At noon, Xiao Xia, a media worker working in Haidian District, Beijing, finished his lunch. Since the company does not have a cafeteria, he and his colleagues usually order takeout on their mobile phones for lunch. After the meal, Xiao Xia counted and found that rice, main dishes, side dishes, soup...one person's meal consumed 4 plastic lunch boxes. In the trash can in the company's corridor, takeout lunch boxes have piled up into a small mountain.

The rapid growth of the online food delivery industry has greatly facilitated people's eating and filled people's stomachs, but it has also created more waste to a certain extent. And plastic lunch boxes go directly to the garbage dump, which poses a hidden danger to the environment.

How to reduce the piles of plastic lunch boxes? How to achieve green development in the food delivery industry? This is a difficult problem that requires multi-faceted measures.

¢Ù Large usage of plastic lunch boxes

How popular is food delivery? According to data released by Internet food delivery platforms such as Meituan Waimai, Ele.me, and Baidu Waimai, the daily order volume of the three food delivery platforms in China is about 20 million. Due to the rapid delivery, rich variety, and convenient payment, many foreigners in China commented that in addition to "high-speed rail, Alipay, shared bicycles, and online shopping", China's food delivery should also be classified as one of the "new four great inventions."

The explosion of the food delivery business has caused excessive use of meal boxes. An environmental organization studied and analyzed 100 food delivery orders and found that on average, each takeaway order consumes 3.27 disposable plastic meal boxes/cups. This means that currently, more than 60 million plastic meal boxes are used every day on China's Internet food ordering platforms.

In fact, not only meal boxes, but also plastic bags, plastic tableware, and plastic outer packaging used for food delivery are all plastic waste. The main components of ordinary plastic meal boxes and tableware are polypropylene, and the main component of plastic bags is polyethylene, both of which are ordinary non-degradable plastics. It is reported that the plastic bags used by food delivery platforms every day can cover 420,000 square meters, which can cover a West Lake in about 15 days.

For many catering companies, using plastic lunch boxes is also a helpless move. Some industry insiders said that Chinese food contains a lot of soup and grease, and it is more appropriate to use plastic lunch boxes. Although some catering companies currently use paper boxes and other packaging, most degradable lunch boxes are not suitable for Chinese food. They are easy to seep water and oil, causing rice to stick together, which is difficult to be accepted by consumers. In addition, the cost of lunch boxes is also a consideration for catering companies. Some catering company managers said that takeaway packaging accounts for about 2% of the total cost.

In fact, the plastic lunch boxes currently used for takeout are not "useless". The reporter's investigation found that most plastic lunch boxes are printed with recyclable logos, and resources can be reused through the garbage recycling process. But the reality is that most consumers throw away the lunch boxes directly after finishing their meals. Even if there are leftovers in the lunch boxes, most of them are "covered". The "mixing" of plastic waste and kitchen waste has brought a lot of trouble to the recycling of takeaway waste.

¢ÚPoor plastic recycling channels

Even if it enters the garbage recycling process, the recycling value of takeaway boxes is not high. According to industry insiders, the price of plastic recycling is low and the cost of re-resourceization is high. Recyclers are generally unwilling to pick up takeaway boxes full of oil stains. Even if they pick them up, they have to spend time and effort to clean them. Therefore, plastic lunch boxes are not popular in the recycling market. Both garbage recycling companies and the city's "scavenger army" are "indifferent" to recycling plastic products.

At the same time, China has not yet formed a complete recycling system. Plastic lunch boxes, as low-value-added recyclables, are difficult to enter the recycling channel of renewable resources. Even if consumers take the initiative to sort plastic waste, due to the imperfect recycling system, sanitation vehicles may mix various types of garbage together when transporting garbage.

Since it is difficult to recycle, plastic lunch boxes can only be "mixed" into urban domestic waste, enter the garbage disposal system, and eventually be incinerated or landfilled as ordinary garbage. However, if different plastic components are incinerated together, it is easy to cause air pollution; and before landfilling, large plastic waste is generally simply incinerated, which will produce a large amount of waste gas emissions. Therefore, letting plastic lunch boxes enter the garbage disposal system is by no means a fundamental solution.

In fact, the "white pollution" caused by plastic products is not unique to China, and countries around the world are also facing the same problem. If there is a relatively sound garbage classification system, plastic lunch boxes and other products can be effectively recycled through recycling channels. However, data shows that only 14% of plastic packaging is recycled worldwide.

In terms of the cost of recycling and processing lunch boxes, there are also experiences and lessons worth learning. For example, in Japan, the recycling and processing fees of lunch boxes are borne by consumers; in Europe and the United States, the processing fees are borne by manufacturers. In China, Shanghai implemented the "Interim Measures for the Management of Disposable Plastic Lunch Boxes" in June 2000, and the management department charged 3 cents per lunch box to manufacturers of disposable plastic lunch boxes as a recycling and processing fee. However, the implementation of this system was not smooth and was abolished in May 2014.

¢Û Strengthen classified recycling and treatment

Experts said that solving the problem of takeaway garbage should start from the source and downstream. Measures should be taken to reduce the generation of takeaway garbage, and professional recycling and treatment of takeaway garbage should be strengthened, the efficiency of utilizing and treating "stock garbage" should be greatly improved, and the generation and scale of "incremental garbage" should be strictly controlled.

Strengthening classified recycling and resource processing are the main countermeasures to solve the problem of takeaway garbage. In March this year, the National Development and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development issued the "Implementation Plan for the Classification System of Domestic Waste", requiring the implementation of mandatory classification of domestic waste in 46 cities in China, and the recycling rate of domestic waste should reach more than 35% by the end of 2020.

In this regard, experts said that because the identification of takeaway garbage is relatively simple, it can be used as a breakthrough to promote garbage classification management. For example, in areas where students and office workers are relatively concentrated, targeted classification and recycling of takeaway garbage should be carried out. After the initial classification and collection are achieved, professional companies will be designated for unified recycling and treatment.

Sheng Min, Secretary General of the Recycled Plastics Branch of the China Recycling Association, said that China currently does not have a corresponding subsidy mechanism for the recycling of recycled resources such as waste plastics. He said that there are two ways to learn from. One is the European model, in which the government adopts mandatory policies to subsidize the recycling of renewable resources; the other is the Japanese model, which cultivates the quality of the people and does a good job of garbage sorting from the source.

Song Guojun, a professor at the School of Environment of Renmin University of China, believes that the mandatory source sorting policy should be firmly implemented, the polluter pays principle should be followed, and the extended producer responsibility system should be implemented to encourage polluters to reduce waste output, while using resource recycling income to make up for the social cost of garbage management.

For the classified recycling of low-value-added recyclables such as plastics, some cities in China have also formulated some measures, such as establishing a fund to issue subsidies and punishing violators. Some industry insiders pointed out that in the specific implementation, it is necessary to continue to explore solutions to problems such as the pre-subsidy of the industrial chain, the inability to determine the objects of punishment, the high cost of statistical supervision of recycled materials, and excessive investment.

¢ÜInnovate takeaway packaging

From the source of takeaway garbage, it is necessary to strengthen the regulation and supervision of takeaway enterprises to achieve the reduction of takeaway garbage. Among them, the most important idea is to seek innovation in takeaway delivery packaging and methods.

Experts suggest that subsidies can be provided for the scientific and technological research and development of relevant enterprises, and tax exemptions can be reduced for degradable products to block "white pollution" at the source, so that the public can obtain more convenient and environmentally friendly alternative products.

At present, some catering companies have used degradable materials such as pulp lunch boxes and sugarcane fiber dinner plates, but the cost of such lunch boxes is often higher than that of plastic lunch boxes, so it will take time for them to be fully popularized.

In June this year, Meituan Takeaway, China Cuisine Association, China Environmental Protection Foundation and dozens of catering takeaway brands jointly launched the "Green Takeaway Industry Convention (Green Ten Articles)", which proposed "promoting the use of green tableware" and other contents, and issued a "hero post" to the supply chain to find healthy and safe green tableware for small and micro enterprises in the catering industry. There are also food delivery platforms that are working with scientific research institutions to develop biodegradable and environmentally friendly lunch boxes.

Experts suggest that binding regulations should be made for the reduction and resource utilization of food delivery packaging materials. According to the principle of "whoever pollutes should govern", garbage disposal fees should be added to food delivery, so that merchants, platforms and consumers pay for the recycling of food delivery garbage.

There are also opinions that we can follow the internationally adopted garbage recycling deposit system and innovate recycling channels. When consumers buy food delivery, they first pay a part of the deposit to the platform. After finishing the meal, they send the food delivery box to the self-service recycling machine or manual recycling point. After the platform confirms, the deposit will be returned to the consumer, so as to promote consumers to establish healthy and good consumption concepts and garbage recycling awareness. (Reporter Liu Yao)

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