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Foam dinnerware back in China


Fu Lai
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(China Daily) A 14-year ban on the sale of disposable dinnerware made of plastic foam will be lifted on May 1, despite concerns over the potential environmental risks.

Food packaging made of the substance has been omitted from a list of industries to be eliminated, according to an amended guideline on industrial restructuring from the National Development and Reform Commission in February.

Plastic foam is often called Styrofoam, but the Dow Chemical Co product is not used to make food containers or disposable coffee cups.

Plastic foam is one of the 36 industries involved in the adjustment to be encouraged, limited or eliminated by China's top economic planner.

An official of the commission confirmed to China Daily that plastic-foam dinnerware will be allowed on the market again on May 1, but declined to say why the ban will be lifted.

"The commission will explain why the adjustments were made in the near future and release the explanation on its website," he said.

Plastic-foam dinnerware was included in a list of products and industries to be eliminated that was approved by the State Council in 1999. One reason it was on the list was the pollution caused by discarding the material because it breaks down very little in the environment. Many experts were also concerned that plastic foam is not safe in food packaging because it can release toxins when heated.

But plastic-foam dinnerware has still been produced and sold in many places despite the ban, as it is much cheaper than dinnerware or other materials such as paper, said Dong Jinshi, vice-president of the International Food packaging Association.

Food packaging made of plastic foam is toxic-free as long as it is produced and used properly, he said.

"But the problem is that much of the plastic-foam food packaging sold and used in the market cannot meet quality standards, and some is even made of recycled plastic waste," he said.

Besides, Chinese prefer hot food, which might cause toxic leakage in plastic-foam packaging, he said.

Authorities should bar some enterprises from producing the material and intensify law enforcement to prevent harm to people and the environment, he said.

About 2 million disposable dinnerware products are used daily in Beijing, and plastic-foam packaging accounts for 20 percent, according to the International Food Packaging Association. Most of this packaging is used in low-end restaurants such as roadside food stalls, the association said.

Zhao Yingchun, a barbecue owner in Beijing, said his restaurants have been providing environmentally friendly paper boxes for customers to package food, although it is more expensive than plastic foam.

"I will consider using plastic-foam packaging after the ban is lifted as long as it is toxin-free," he said.

Yang Weihe, a packaging expert at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, is concerned that lifting the ban lead to "a big increase in the amount of plastic waste because there is no effective recycling system to deal with plastic foam".

Yang said some organizations proposed to lift the ban as early as 2010, but many environmental protection experts opposed the move.

An effective recycling system should be established before the ban on the use of plastic foam is lifted, Yang said.

Dong, from the International Food Packaging Association, agreed.

"Government departments and enterprises producing plastic-foam packaging should collaborate on working out an effective solution to recycling the material," he said.

 

Don't use it.

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The enviormentally challenged and infamous musical trio...Pecker, Paul, and Mary Jane once wrote a diddy about foam plates being introduced in Chinertucky....something about ...."they're blowin' in the wind my friend, yes they're blowin' in the wind"

 

I know here in the US of A that with a lil' food left on them they can soar with the greatest of ease. I git through eatin' and I sinmply walk out onto the deck and sail my dish cleanin' blues away. No problem, the neighbors pick em up and dispose of them properly by burnin' them in their burn barrel out back.

 

tsap seui

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Foam stuff never degrades... means here forever... gee, manmade waste that sticks around, what a great gift to our future generations! :bye2:

 

As PP&Mary sang in their cover of the Dylan classic...

"how many times can a man turn his head
Pretending he just doesn't see?"

 

http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XODYyOTIwMDQ=.html

Edited by Fu Lai (see edit history)
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I gave up lookin' a long time ago. Worst thing that ever happened to mother earth is giving birth to mankind.

 

I saw Dylan last July in Johnstown, Pa. He's comin' back to Pittsburgh in April, wanna ticket?

Edited by tsap seui (see edit history)
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From the Global Times

 

Boxes of poison?

 

White pollution

The NDRC banned polystyrene and foaming agent boxes 14 years ago after they had become known as "white pollution" littering China's railways. Passengers on trains constantly throw these boxes, often containing instant noodles and prepared food, out of the windows, causing the white plastics to pile up along railways and river banks.

Mao Da, a co-founder of a Beijing-based independent environmental think tank, told the Global Times that the decomposition of plastic-form dinnerware takes a long time and could therefore harm the ecosystem.

"The plastics just become fragmented into small pieces that go into the ocean with the rivers," Mao said. "They will harm the health of marine creatures such as turtles, which mistakenly eat the plastics."

. . .

Public out of the loop

Many netizens on the microblogging service, Sina Weibo, expressed their anger toward the change, calling it "sudden" and "unreasonable."

"My trust in the NDRC and China's food safety has dropped to zero," wrote another Weibo user.

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