Operations At Recycling Facilities As China's Ban On Waste Products Causes Trash Pile-ups

Workers separate plastic waste from other waste moving along a conveyor at a Tae Seo Recycling Co. facility in Gwangmyeong, South Korea, on Thursday, April 19, 2018. In a bid to curb its own rampant pollution, China has clamped down on the import of unsorted paper and plastics, with outdated industrial mills used to process foreign scrap into reusable raw materials closing down. The effects of the strict new standards on halting impurities in waste imports are now being felt worldwide. Photographer: Jean Chung/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Workers separate plastic waste from other waste moving along a conveyor at a Tae Seo Recycling Co. facility in Gwangmyeong, South Korea, on Thursday, April 19, 2018. In a bid to curb its own rampant pollution, China has clamped down on the import of unsorted paper and plastics, with outdated industrial mills used to process foreign scrap into reusable raw materials closing down. The effects of the strict new standards on halting impurities in waste imports are now being felt worldwide. Photographer: Jean Chung/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Operations At Recycling Facilities As China's Ban On Waste Products Causes Trash Pile-ups
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Bloomberg / Contributor
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955493286
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Bloomberg
Gemaakt op:
19 april 2018
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Bron:
Bloomberg
Naam materiaal:
SKOREA WASTE
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