Waste management in Taiwan explained

Waste management in Taiwan refers to the management and disposal of waste in Taiwan. It is regulated by the Department of Waste Management of the Ministry of Environment of the Executive Yuan.

History

Waste management was not centrally regulated during the early years of Meiji era Japan.[1] In 1900, enacted the Sewage Disposal Law,[2] the Waste Cleaning Act,[1] and the Dirt Removal Law.[3] The legislation was aimed at improving sanitation in Japanese cities[3] and made waste disposal a municipal responsibility.[3] [1] [2] At the time, Taiwan was a territory of Japan.

Under the Republic of China, Taiwan began to industrialize by the 1950s and 1960s.[4] In the following decades, industrialization occurred more rapidly, leading to a higher waste output.[4] [5] Taiwan then became known as the Garbage Island.[6] [7] To combat increased levels of waste, a recycling program began in 1989, following a 1987 amendment to the Waste Disposal Act. Recycling in Taiwan started as a private effort, but the initiative soon became overrun with fraud and other scandals due to ineffective government regulation. The private organizations and industries in charge of the program were free to falsely report recycling rates.The government established the 3R Foundation (reduce, reuse, recycle) in 1994 to discourage instances of fraud and other scandals.[8]

Recyclables were reclassified into eight groups: containers, tires, pesticide containers, lubricant oil, lead-acid batteries, vehicles, home appliances, and communication products. Each of these materials were the responsibility of one commission, and the commissions themselves were overseen by the Environmental Protection Administration.[8] [9] Taiwan's limited space to build trash incinerators and landfills were recognized as a problem,[4] [10] but from the 1980s and as late as 1996, waste was freely placed in the streets for collection.[11] At the time, Taiwan had five incinerators in operation; at full capacity, only 10% of annual combustible waste was disposed of via incineration. Other methods of garbage disposal placed a large amount of stress on existing landfills.[12] The eight separate committees initially established by recyclable material were eventually merged into the Resource Recycling Fund Management Committee. General oversight of the recycling program has been placed under the purview of the Resource Recycling Fund Management Committee, but a separate committee handles the establishment of recycling fees, and another committee is called on to periodically audit the recycling program itself.[8] [9]

Waste collection and disposal

People are responsible for bringing their own trash to the collection point.[13] [14] In some areas such as Taipei City, nonrecyclables must be collected in colour-coded bags that can be bought at convenience stores.[6] [7] [15] Raw food waste is processed to be further used as fertilizer by farmers.[16] Cooked food waste is processed to be further turned into food for livestock.[6] [17] Not all recyclables are collected daily; the most common recyclables have a specially designated pickup day.[18] There are 33 items considered recyclable, which in turn fall into 13 categories.[19]

Garbage collection trucks are known to play music to alert people of their presence at collection points. Songs played include Tekla Bądarzewska-Baranowska's "Maiden's Prayer" and Ludwig van Beethoven's "Für Elise."[14] [20] [21] Starting in 2003, recycling trucks played Hou Dejian's composition, "Any Empty Wine Bottles for Sale?" as first recorded by Su Rui for the 1983 film Papa, Can You Hear Me Sing.[22] Christmas music is played during Christmas, and at Chinese New Year, recordings of Chinese traditional tunes play.[23] Local governments have occasionally changed the garbage collection song.[24] [25] Other prerecorded tracks played on the trucks include short English-language lessons.[20] [26]

Power generation

In 2016, 76.8% of fly ash from coal-fired power plants in Taiwan were reused in the construction areas, totaling to 1.703 million tons. Any remaining industrial waste from power generation industries, such as wire, cables and scrap were reused by waste disposal contractors through open bidding process. In 2016, there was 4,950 tons of such waste sold, which generated a revenue of NT$533 million.[27]

Recycling facilities

Incinerators

Incomplete list of incinerators in Taiwan. Please expand this list and correct it, if necessary.

FacilityCityCapacityElectric Power OutputHeight of smokestackYear of inaugurationCoordinatesRemarks
Taipei 1800 tons/d 48 MW 150 m 1999 25.1080104439 N 121.49946548 E chimney with observation deck and restaurant
Taipei 900 tons/d 144 MW 73 m 1991 25.06314835 N 121.605538 E
Taipei 1200 tons/d 13.5 MW 147 m 1994 25.00501321 N 121.5876559 E
New Taipei City 1350 tons/d 35.7 MW 150.5 m 2001 25.134266 N 121.367760 E
New Taipei City 450 tons/d 22.3 MW 118 m 1995 24.967268 N 121.380041 E
Taichung 900 tons/d 26.2 MW 120 m 1995 24.152714 N 120.598019 E
Tainan 900 tons/d 14.3 MW 124 m 1999 23.0455158597 N 120.07444869 E
Kaohsiung 1350 tons/d 150 MW 118.8 m 2000 22.699823 N 120.368902 E
Keelung 600 tons/d 15.8 MW 100 m 2005 25.122733 N 121.775569 E
Pingtung City 900 tons/d 22.5 MW 100 m 2000 22.4997393 N 120.49855 E
Changhua City 900 tons/d 22.6 MW 118.3 m 2000 23.8264892 N 120.4603268 E
Chiayi City 300 tons/d 2.4 MW 68 m 1998 23.444114 N 120.44146 E
Hsinchu City 900 tons/d 23.7 MW 67 m 2000 24.834300 N 120.916464 E
Lucao, Chiayi 900 tons/d 120 m 2001 23.449194 N 120.280361 E
Zhunan 500 tons/d 11.8 MW 70 m 24.673268 N 120.835812 E
Kaohsiung 1350 tons/d 38 MW 60 m 2001 22.810874 N 120.270397 E
New Taipei City 900 tons/d 14.6 MW 120 m 1994 24.958135 N 121.49713 E
Tainan 900 tons/d 22.5 MW 100 m 2008 23.039436 N 120.282977 E
Taitung 300 tons/d 2005 22.731026 N 121.13579 E
Kaohsiung 900 tons/d 25.5 MW 100 m 1999 22.664982 N 120.331439 E
Kaohsiung 1800 tons/d 49 MW 87.6 m 2000 22.549339 N 120.377224 E
Houli District 900 tons/d 26.2 MW 120 m 2000 24.287653 N 120.697330 E
Taoyuan 1350 tons/d 35.1 MW 80 m 2001 24.992175 N 121.249752 E
Taichung 900 tons/d 100 m 2004 24.096227 N 120.619615 E
Luodom 600 tons/d 14.7 MW 120 m 2005 24.661161 N 121.835675 E
Linnei 300 tons/d 2005 23.7709175 N 120.609016 E ?

Notes and References

  1. Web site: History and Current State of Waste Management in Japan. Ministry of the Environment. 2020-07-16. 2014.
  2. Web site: The Japanese industrial waste experience: Lessons for rapidly industrializing countries. United Nations Environmental Programme. 2020-07-18. 2013.
  3. Book: Hezri, A.A.. 277. 3R Policies for Southeast and East Asia. 2009 . 11: Toward 3R-Based Waste Management: Policy Change in Japan, Malaysia and the Philippines .
  4. News: Pacific Economic Cooperation Council. Harvey . Houng. Policies and Measures of Waste Disposal and Treatment in Taiwan. 13 April 2017.
  5. News: Taiwan’s Recycling Boom: A Shining Example for Asia, the World. 13 April 2017. The Diplomat. 3 December 2013.
  6. News: subscription . Chen. Kathy. Taiwan: The World’s Geniuses of Garbage Disposal. 13 April 2017. Wall Street Journal. 17 May 2016.
  7. News: Rossi . Marcello . How Taiwan Has Achieved One of the Highest Recycling Rates in the World . 10 January 2019 . Smithsonian Magazine . 3 January 2019.
  8. Fan. Kuo-Shuh. Lin. Chun-Hsu. Chang. Tien-Chin. Management and Performance of Taiwan's Waste Recycling Fund. Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association. May 2005. 55. 5. 574–582. 10.1080/10473289.2005.10464647. 2162-2906. free.
  9. News: Fan. Kuo-Shuh. Management and Performance of Chinese Taipei’s Waste Recycling Fund. 13 April 2017. Pacific Economic Cooperation Council.
  10. News: 13 April 2017. Nunns. Cain. Short on Space, Taiwan Embraces a Boom in Recycling. New York Times. 29 November 2013.
  11. News: EPA touts Taiwan’s successful recycling policy. 13 April 2017. Taiwan Today. 23 August 2012.
  12. News: The Art of Managing Waste. 13 April 2017. Taiwan Today. 1 June 1996.
  13. News: 13 April 2017. Lee. Wendy. Taiwan’s garbage disposal system gets praise from foreign media. Taiwan News. 22 March 2017.
  14. News: Davidson . Helen . Lin . Chu Hui . Classical trash: how Taiwan’s musical bin lorries transformed ‘garbage island’ . 27 December 2022 . The Guardian . 26 December 2022 . The "garbage doesn’t touch the ground" policy requires residents to bring trash directly out of their homes to the trucks, resulting in more hygienic streets in Taiwan’s sweaty climate. Compulsory, government-issued bin bags – priced at less than 1p per litre – have reduced Taipei’s household refuse by two-thirds, the director of the city’s environmental protection bureau says...The songs are a key pillar of the system. How they were chosen is subject to a bit of folklore. On a recent Taiwan-focused podcast, Formosa Files, the cohost John Ross said the songs were preloaded on to trucks bought from Japan in the 1960s, and that later attempts to add other songs – including sea shanties and English lessons – were too confusing. Liou, however, says the trucks were bought from Germany and only played Für Elise. He can’t explain where A Maiden’s Prayer came from. The rumour inside the department is that a former director heard his daughter play it and added it to the playlist..
  15. News: Ross. Julia. What I Picked Up About Trash in Taipei. 13 April 2017. Washington Post. 2 December 2007.
  16. News: Msibi. Mphikeleli. Taiwan, the country that knows no garbage. 13 April 2017. The Swazi Observer. 15 December 2016.
  17. News: Jennings. Ralph. In Taiwan, leftover food scraps help farmers sustain porky appetites. 13 April 2017. The Guardian. 23 March 2016.
  18. News: Close-Up: Taiwan's musical garbage trucks. 13 April 2017. BBC. 23 January 2011.
  19. News: Workshop Materials on WEEE Management in Taiwan. 14 April 2017. Environmental Protection Agency. October 2012.
  20. News: Qin . Amy . Chiang Chien . Amy . When You Hear Beethoven, It’s Time to Take Out the Trash (and Mingle) . 9 February 2022 . New York Times . 8 February 2022.
  21. News: Nien. Hsiang-wan. Yang. Ming-yi. Chin. Jonathan. Garbage trucks disrupt classical concert. 13 April 2017. 23 August 2016.
  22. News: Chiu. Yu-Tzu. EPA changes tune in bid to promote national recycling. 14 April 2017. Taipei Times. 25 June 2003.
  23. News: Hickman. Matt. Taiwan Garbage Trucks: Classical Music Accompanies Collection (VIDEO). 13 April 2017. Hufffington Post. 9 January 2012.
  24. News: Pingtung residents lamenting change of garbage truck song. 14 April 2017. China Post. 20 November 2010.
  25. News: Tung. Chen-kuo. Chiu. Chih-jou. Chung. Jake. Renai Township trash collectors get a new tune. 14 April 2017. Taipei Times. 3 August 2013.
  26. News: Phipps. Gavin. Tainan's garbage is fine, thank you. 14 April 2017. Taipei Times. 7 September 2002.
  27. Web site: Taiwan Power Company Sustainability Report 2017. Taipower. 108. 29 March 2018.