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Society must begin to make recycling a regular part of life, officials say
BEIJING - The country loses about 20 billion yuan ($2.9 billion) each year due to the lack of recycling programs that would reuse urban rubbish, experts said on Tuesday.
"Rubbish is a resource, as long as it's properly treated," Chen Yong, director of the Guangdong branch of Chinese Academy of Sciences, said in a report on the development of Chinese cities.
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"Most of the rubbish could find new uses if we had an efficient system for sorting it," Chen said.
The amount of rubbish has been growing rapidly in China, accounting for about 26.5 percent of the world's total, Chen said.
With the rapid growth in urban populations, the treatment of garbage has become a headache for city administrators.
Leaving the garbage in open air, burning, or burying it all cause environmental concerns and the trash occupies valuable city land, the report said.
For example, rubbish landfills in Beijing have taken more than 20,000 mu, or 1,333 hectares, of land and the area is increasing about 500 mu, or 33 hectares, every year, according to the report.
Therefore, the development of a resource-conserving and environment-friendly society has become a high priority for the transitional economy and society in China today, the report said.
More than 130 companies build garbage treatment facilities in China for a market that is expanding at nearly 25 percent annually, according to the All-China Environment Federation.
Beijing plans to create 300 community rubbish recycling stations as a part of a "Renewable Resource Recycling Day" this year, to encourage people to recycle rubbish near their homes.
"We should enhance public awareness and establish a system of laws and regulations for developing a recycling economy," Chen said in the report.
The country needs to use science and technology in rubbish recycling, with the awareness that the wrong methods could cause secondary pollution, the report said.
"The country has begun to be concerned about the low-carbon economy we need to use advanced technology and management tools to improve energy utilization efficiency," Mao Qizhi, a professor with Tsinghua University, said in the report.