Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
China Science

Food Delivery Apps Are Drowning China in Plastic (nytimes.com) 115

In all likelihood, the enduring physical legacy of China's internet boom will not be the glass-and-steel office complexes or the fancy apartments for tech elites. It will be the plastic. From a report: The astronomical growth of food delivery apps in China is flooding the country with takeout containers, utensils and bags. And the country's patchy recycling system isn't keeping up. The vast majority of this plastic ends up discarded, buried or burned with the rest of the trash, researchers and recyclers say. Scientists estimate that the online takeout business in China was responsible for 1.6 million tons of packaging waste in 2017, a ninefold jump from two years before. That includes 1.2 million tons of plastic containers, 175,000 tons of disposable chopsticks, 164,000 tons of plastic bags and 44,000 tons of plastic spoons.

Put together, it is more than the amount of residential and commercial trash of all kinds disposed of each year by the city of Philadelphia. The total for 2018 grew to an estimated two million tons. People in China still generate less plastic waste, per capita, than Americans. But researchers estimate that nearly three-quarters of China's plastic waste ends up in inadequately managed landfills or out in the open, where it can easily make its way into the sea. More plastic enters the world's oceans from China than from any other country. Plastic can take centuries to break down undersea.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Food Delivery Apps Are Drowning China in Plastic

Comments Filter:
  • In all likelihood, the enduring physical legacy of China's internet boom will not be the glass-and-steel office complexes or the fancy apartments for tech elites. It will be the plastic.

    Instead of building the buildings out glass and steel . . . build them out of plastic.

    Plastic buildings survive typhoons better, like bamboo building scaffolding.

    It just kinda swings a bit with the wind, instead of collapsing.

    • lolz no, it oxidizes, degrades and also gets stress fractures. Unsuitable building material.

      • But that all those railroad ties (made of plastic)....I guess that's the reason all those trains fell through the rails. Hint: There are many, many types of plastic. Some break down in the UV (i.e., sun), others no so much. And there *is* structural plastic material. Citation? Go ask the Duck, don't waste my time.
        • why don't you use a search engine and educate your ignorant self about how the plastic ties have exactly the issues I mentioned and more...

          First of all, those "plastic ties" are a plastic mixture reinforced by a... wait for it... wooden beam

          And yet they still have issues I mentioned, here is what my state of illinois found

          "Performance and safety
          issues arising from these properties include: fracture, low tie-ballast interaction, spike-holding
          power, tie plate cutting, creep (increased gage), stress-relaxation

  • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @11:02AM (#58666438) Journal
    I have a few friends who own restaurants in China. Takeout hasn't changed in terms of volume, it's now been centralized to delivery services (typically Sherpa). It used to be individuals calling the store directly, now it's people ordering on-line, and Sherpa (or others) placing the actual order. Still same number of take-outs. And yes, China has always had an issue with trash - people care about their homes and their own yard, but go 1 cm outside that? It's OK to just throw stuff everywhere, who cares - it's not mine...
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      It's OK to just throw stuff everywhere, who cares - it's not mine...

      Whatever happened to that feeling of collective ownership and shared responsibility for the commons?

      There goes your socialism.

    • Yup. You can see farmers throwing AA batteries in a ditch half a meter from their property. On the other side of the road is their field where they grow food. And they source the water from the river the ditch flows into. They really don't deal with trash.

      • by umghhh ( 965931 )
        If there is no other option, it is too expensive or they do not know about it then this is what happens.
    • Then this would make it easier to audit. Insert government auditors into the Sherpa delivery stream, audit container types, penalize the businesses responsible as only a totalitarian government can -- you have your choice of a fine, a ding on your social credit score, jail time, etc. -- and start solving the problem that way.

      • The Government loves that, too! In fact, Weixin is used regularly by the Government to track down tax cheats. Now that everything runs through a centralized payment system, you cannot avoid taxation. Consumers bitch about higher prices, but don't realize their insistence on "paying with the phone" is what is driving up the costs, because the shop owner now is paying taxes on every purchase, not just some of them.
  • The vast majority of this plastic ends up discarded, buried or burned with the rest of the trash

    Two of those are very different from the third. Plastic waste that's properly disposed in a landfill or incinerated may or may not be environmentally (or energetically) ideal, but is a far sight better than "loose" plastic floating around the planet.

    But researchers estimate that nearly three-quarters of China's plastic waste ends up in inadequately managed landfills or out in the open, where it can easily make

    • Spot on. The drinking straw and plastic bag bans in the USA are reasoned as if we were one of the countries without a functioning garbage collection system. Equating the two leads to a huge waste of political capital to fix a mostly non-existent problem. I'd rather see that political energy put into better transit, high gas taxes, and so forth rather than preventing me from using a soda straw because somewhere in SE Asia has a trash disposal problem.

      I live in Portland Oregon with two rivers and a glacial

  • The new America ... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @11:04AM (#58666446)

    ... China is.

    I come from generations of oil patch workers. I grew up with rivers and small streams that were polluted with oil sheen that had the unmistakable smell of hydrocarbon.

    Fishing lines were fouled with the stuff. Local crabs don't taste as good 60 years later precisely because they don't have those additives anymore.

    Same with local shrimp and oysters.

    We had air pollution that we were used to. When we went up-country to the piney woods, we appreciated what clean air was.

    As I got into my 50s (I'm 73), I noticed China was going through precisely the same phase. Water was dirty, visibility low ...

    In a lot of ways, China is going through what America has, except at an accelerated pace.

    Like America, they will survive the birthing pains of becoming king of the hill.

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *

      Like America, they will survive the birthing pains of becoming king of the hill.

      No they won't because America will try as hard as it can to give China an abortion.

      • Emphasis on "try". If you keep going the way you do you'll sink yourself into irrelevance in the process.

    • Like America, they will survive the birthing pains of becoming king of the hill.

      Maybe. Or maybe none of us will survive the birth.

    • not quite.
      China's pollution is much much worse than America's ever was. For example, we nearly killed Lake Erie. China is killing multiple seas around them.
      In addition, American politicians cleaned up, because we voted them in. Chinese politicians are trying to do enough to keep their heads.
  • If the food is being delivered to your home, you can eat it with your own utensils at home and save on that plastic. Plastic utensils should be an optional item when ordering food delivery. I've actually built up a collection of plastic forks and knives because I'd rather eat my delivery with my own metal utensils than flimsy plastic junk!

    • Home delivery (Score:4, Interesting)

      by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @12:47PM (#58666988)

      Plastic utensils should be an optional item when ordering food delivery.

      It should be opt-in and cost money. If it is opt-out then it doesn't solve the problem.

      I've actually built up a collection of plastic forks and knives because I'd rather eat my delivery with my own metal utensils than flimsy plastic junk!

      I return them to the stores (at my convenience) or other places that really could use them when they hand me plastic-ware I don't actually need.

      • They probably just throw them out if you return them.

        • by sjbe ( 173966 )

          They probably just throw them out if you return them.

          Usually I return them before I leave the store. However if they decide to toss them instead of using them I don't control that. I'm not going to stress about things I can't control. I've done my part. If they don't want to do theirs then that is on them.

    • If the food is being delivered to your home, you can eat it with your own utensils at home and save on that plastic.

      Yeah, but then I have to wash them...

  • Since China till last year was handling most of the recycling from USA and now have stopped doing it, they have excess recycling capacity to handle domestic recycling. its probably USA's recycling being burnt or put into ladfills since the trade war started.

  • But researchers estimate that nearly three-quarters of China's plastic waste ends up in inadequately managed landfills or out in the open, where it can easily make its way into the sea. More plastic enters the world's oceans from China than from any other country.

    I understand that China has made great strides in AI [cnbc.com], High-speed trains [telegraph.co.uk], not mentioning landing [the first ever] probe on the dark side of the moon.

    When I visited New York last month, I could not believe I was in the 1st World! Old (1950s) trains and infrastructure, filth [almost] everywhere. As if to drive my thinking home, a quick friend I met pointed me to this Seattle is Dying [youtube.com] documentary.

    Sad.

    • America HAS been crumbling. We desperately need to re-do our infrastructure and then maintain it. Sadly, the baby boomers voted in politicians that have seen to it that tax money flows to the rich and not to the nation.
      • Sadly, the baby boomers voted in politicians that have seen to it that tax money flows to the rich and not to the nation.

        Interesting theory you've got there.

        For reference, about 70% of all Federal taxes** goes to Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and Welfare.

        Oddly enough, the wealthy don't use nearly as much Medicare/Medicaid/SS/Welfare as the poor and middle classes do.

        ** Note that Federal taxes are NOT the same as Federal Spending. We spend more than we tax every year. That "about 70%" of Federal

  • No way to invest in China. Foreign recycler would be imprisoned for electricity theft [google.com].
  • China already has experience in building artificial islands [wikipedia.org]. What's the problem? Construction material shouldn't be an issue

  • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

    Do the delivery services show up again, an hour later?

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @01:43PM (#58667386) Homepage Journal

    Real first world nations are replacing foam clamshell packaging with mushrooms grown to form factors, packing peanuts with similar biodegradable products, plastic bags and containers with vegetable fiber "plastic".

    So sad that China is so far behind.

  • OK, so we're told that China, a nation of 1.4 billion people, produces more trash than Philadelphia, a city of 1.5 million? Gee ... something about that math just ... adds up.

  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @01:59PM (#58667480)
    When you order food delivery from a restaurant in Korea, it comes in restaurant bowls and utensils [businessinsider.com]. You eat your food, then place the dirty dishes and utensils outside your door. The delivery guy comes back an hour or two later and picks it up. If you fail to return the dishes, they'll call you to remind you to put it outside the door. If they can't get the stuff back, they just bill the credit card you used to pay for the food. (A deposit system would probably work just as well.)
  • I've noticed a bit of correlation at home.

    The more something is prepared from scratch, the less non-recyclable materials we have leftover. On the extreme end is produce, which can sometimes be used 100% (basil, assuming it didn't come in a bag), and most other produce has a very small rubber band. There is some food waste but that can go back into the ground as compost.

    On the other end, the more heavily prepared, the more packaging is leftover. And often, we have packaging that doesn't even have a recycle logo on it. Strange materials are being used sometimes.


    The more prepared, more trash leftover things usually are less healthy with more sugar, salt, fats, etc. Hell, even the rotisserie chicken had sugar in it. Couldn't believe it This isn't scientific or anything. Just something I noticed. If you have the guys over for video games and have just a few snacks, it seems like the trash is overflowing. But then on Sunday if we prepare a meal from scratch, we only have recyclables.

E = MC ** 2 +- 3db

Working...