cover of episode The dirty truth about the global waste trade

The dirty truth about the global waste trade

2025/3/25
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Alexander Clapp
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Meghna Chakrabarty
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Meghna Chakrabarty: 我关注的是全球电子垃圾和废物贸易的现状以及对环境和人类健康的影响。通过与Alexander Clapp的对话,我了解到全球电子垃圾产量惊人,到2030年将超过8100万吨,超过长城的长度。美国是世界第二大电子垃圾生产国,只有15%的电子垃圾被回收利用,大部分被填埋、焚烧或运往海外。在加纳阿克拉的阿格巴格洛希贫民窟,人们处理电子垃圾,试图从中提取价值,但环境污染严重,人们的健康受到严重威胁。在阿格巴格洛希吃鸡蛋,摄入的二恶英含量是每日可耐受摄入量的220倍。加纳政府为了改善形象,拆除了阿格巴格洛希的垃圾场,但污染问题依然存在,焚烧电子垃圾的行为仍在继续,污染被转移到了居民区附近。我关注的是发达国家如何将垃圾运往其他国家,以及这些国家人民为此付出的代价。 Alexander Clapp: 我在书中揭示了全球废物贸易的真相,特别是发达国家如何将垃圾运往发展中国家。在加纳,被称为“焚烧男孩”的年轻移民们焚烧电子垃圾以提取铜,但这种行为造成了严重的空气污染和健康问题。“焚烧男孩”们每天的收入微薄,健康状况堪忧,他们咳嗽、肢体僵硬,却无法获得医疗保健。加纳政府为了发展网络经济,鼓励进口二手电子产品,但许多进口的电子产品无法使用,导致大量电子垃圾被焚烧。阿格巴格洛希贫民窟的环境恶劣,污染严重,人们的生活条件极其艰苦。废物贸易并非仅仅是富国与穷国之间的矛盾,穷国内部也存在剥削。废物贸易的利润来自于规模效应和低廉的劳动力成本。从电子垃圾中提取的铜会被运往其他国家,污染则留在了加纳。加纳试图发展网络经济的努力,最终却回到了殖民时代经济模式。报废的邮轮主要被送往土耳其拆解,这是一个危险性极高的行业。废旧汽车电池的处理方式反映了全球不平等,随着台湾经济发展,废旧汽车电池被转移到拉丁美洲国家。中国曾是西方国家塑料垃圾的主要接收地,但后来停止了进口,导致其他国家成为新的接收地,塑料垃圾出口到非洲的量增加了四倍。许多塑料垃圾并没有被回收利用,而是被倾倒或焚烧。塑料回收过程中也会释放出毒素,塑料微粒污染日益严重。废物贸易中,重要的是转移废物,而不是废物的价值本身。废物贸易实际上是毒素贸易,将垃圾运往无法处理自身垃圾的国家是毫无逻辑的。在印度尼西亚,进口的西方垃圾堆积如山,许多纸张中混杂着塑料垃圾,被用作燃料,造成严重污染。发达国家的消费者应该对自身行为负责,解决垃圾问题的关键在于减少塑料生产,应该避免使用一次性塑料制品,塑料对人体健康有害,体内含有大量的塑料微粒。爪哇岛上有一个“外国垃圾博物馆”,展示了西方国家运往爪哇的塑料垃圾,旨在阻止西方国家的塑料垃圾流入爪哇。

Deep Dive

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Exploring the massive amounts of electronic waste produced globally, this chapter delves into how e-waste is processed in places like Accra, Ghana, and its devastating impact on the communities involved.
  • The world is set to produce over 81 million tons of e-waste annually by 2030.
  • Only 15% of the e-waste in the U.S. is recycled, with most either landfilled, incinerated, or exported.
  • Agbogbloshie in Accra, Ghana, is a major site for e-waste processing, where informal workers burn electronics to extract valuable materials, releasing toxic fumes.
  • The health impacts on workers, known as Burner Boys, include respiratory issues and exposure to dangerous toxins.
  • Despite government attempts to clean up sites like Agbogbloshie, pollution has simply been relocated closer to residential areas.

Shownotes Transcript

When you check out at the pharmacy, you see the journey from idea to medicine, thanks to our intellectual property system, or IP for short. IP safeguards inventions, like a new way to prevent seizures or lower cholesterol. And IP supports competition from other brands, then lower-cost generics, which are 90% of prescriptions filled in the U.S. Innovation, competition, lower costs, thanks to IP.

Learn more at phrma.org slash ipworkswonders. Support for this podcast comes from Is Business Broken? A podcast from BU's Mayrothra Institute that explores questions like why are executives paid so much? Do they deserve it? Listen wherever you get your podcasts. WBUR Podcasts, Boston. This is On Point. I'm Meghna Chakrabarty. The numbers are staggering and difficult to comprehend.

Human beings around the world are on track to produce more than 81 million tons of electronic waste annually by 2030. That's according to the World Economic Forum. We're talking about smartphones, laptops, TVs, and other devices. So how much is 81 million tons? Well, it's 162 billion pounds. Unfathomable, right?

So here's a way to imagine it. A mere four years ago, in 2021, humanity threw away 57.4 million tons of electronic waste. That outweighs the entire length of the Great Wall of China, all 13,171 miles of it. And every year, we are producing more.

The United States is the second largest producer of e-waste in the world. China is number one. Only 15% of the e-waste we throw away is recycled. The vast majority of it is thrown into the landfill, incinerated, or shipped overseas, injected into the bloodstream of the global waste trade. You know that idea that one man's trash is another man's treasure, right?

Well, waste brokers buy and sell our detritus for workers in other countries to dismantle, dissect, and extract whatever value they can. The problem is, when it comes to modern waste, that old aphorism is a lie. Alexander Clapp explains why in his new book, Waste Wars, The Wild Afterlife of Your Trash. And he joins us now. Alexander, welcome to On Point. Meghna, thank you so much for having me.

So start by telling us, who are the Burner Boys? Funny question. The Burner Boys are a group of young migrants in Accra, Ghana. And they spend almost all their hours of the day burning many of our electronics, which end up in Ghana. In the 1990s, Ghana became on the receiving end of many of the electronics you might have thrown away this week or this month or this year.

Old TVs, old laptops, old DVD players. A lot of this stuff, for reasons that are complicated but interesting, ended up in Ghana, or does end up in Ghana.

And when it arrives in Ghana, there's a slum called Agbag Veloshi, where some 60,000 people are employed either directly or indirectly in the processing of your old electronics. Now, sometimes they try to get this stuff to work again. They'll jerry-rig it. They'll fix it back up. But a lot of this stuff just can't be fixed. So what do you do with it? What do you do with an old DVD player that ends up in your slum? Well, you try to extract value from it however you can.

Now, a lot of our electronics have copper on the inside. The problem is that that copper is often encased in plastic encasing. And so the easiest way to access that copper to make use of it is to burn it. Most of us never really think about what happens when we throw our electronics away or even, you know, give them to another group that says they're going to do something with them. And so what I found to be like just really interesting

but in a good way in your book is being able to like almost see and feel these places. So let's do that in this conversation. Sure. What does Agbog Bloshi look like when you visited it?

Agbagbloshi is this huge slum that's built on a peninsular headland in this estuary in Accra. It's some 60,000 people crammed into a space of land that's probably no bigger than, I don't know, 10 or 12 football fields. Wow. It's full of people who don't actually come from Accra. They've come from hundreds, even maybe a thousand miles away from the Sahel, from the deserts of northern Ghana.

They're in the business of processing our old electronics, of burning many of the electronics that you or I might throw away. Agbagbloshi is a fetid, squalid place. There's a lagoon that runs through it, which you cannot actually see. You cannot see the water because it's just a congealed mass of plastic.

It's not unusual to see cows chewing through last meals of television wiring or old VCR tape before heading to the slaughterhouse. It's a really stunning, visceral, physically penetrating place to be. It smells and it has all the sort of, all of your senses are on alarm when you get there. Can I just ask, how did you feel like physically being there?

It was strange. Agbagbloshi has been known for probably 10 to 15 years among Western journalists. So there is a sort of element of a white person coming to Agbagbloshi, walking in, you stand out, and there is an element among people there that you are coming to sort of examine their misery and their poverty. And you have to do your sort of best to...

dissuade them of that notion and you want to make it clear that you're attempting to understand the work that they do and sort of how they got into a place where they've moved hundreds of miles to burn your old electronics. It is a jarring place to be for sure. Mm-hmm.

So when the image of a cow chewing on a last meal of old VCR tapes is really something. But like I said, I appreciated one of the purposes of your book is to disturb us into a state of higher awareness.

about what happens to this stuff. So for the Berner boys, when they're actually incinerating or torching some of these things, like you said, in some cases to extract copper, where are they doing this and how? That's one of the interesting things about Agbagbloshi. So for 10 to 15, even 20 years, this place was a huge embarrassment for the Ghanaian government. As I mentioned earlier, there were journalists who would come, who would photograph. I mean, if you Google this place, there are really stunning photographs of the work that is done there.

In 2021, the Ghanaian government said enough is enough. We don't want it tainting our image anymore. And so there was a huge scrapyard at Agbag Belushi, which they razed to the ground without warning anyone there. Residents woke up one morning, there were bulldozers which came and destroyed their homes, destroyed their workplaces, destroyed their mosques.

The irony is that the Ghanaian government now has announced that they're going to build a hospital on this ground, this extremely polluted, toxic ground. They want to build the largest medical infrastructure in Ghanaian history. They want to build it right there. But with places like this, it's extremely hard to get people who, this is the only work that they've ever known. And so they kept doing this work of burning electronics in order to get the copper wiring out of them. They simply did this closer to their

actual homes. There's another segment of Agbog Buloshi, which is called the Korle Lagoon, and they now do this around the banks of the Korle Lagoon. So again, we're struck with a contradiction here. In an attempt to clean this place up, in an attempt to build a hospital there, all that the Ghanaian government has actually done is moved a ton of the pollution, a lot of the carcinogenic flames that come from the burning of electronics, they've moved it closer to residences. Hmm.

Well, in terms of how toxic it is as well, you've got some really chilling facts. For example, and this also was in your piece in the New York Times about if you eat an egg in Agbagbloshi, you're getting 220 times the tolerable daily intake of chlorinated dioxins, which comes from electronic waste. So are these...

Being burned in some kind of controlled incinerator? Are they being burned in the open air? I mean, I really want to get a deep understanding of what people are being forced to experience because we're throwing away so much stuff.

Yeah. What happens is every day, clumps of wires, these great rat nests of wires. So consider the stuff around you, whether it's a cell phone charger, whether it's the TV cord, for instance, all of this stuff gets gathered. And then it gets moved on bicycles to the banks of the Corley Lagoon, which I mentioned earlier.

Now, the problem with this wiring is that it's flammable, but it's not very flammable. So you need to find kindling. You need to find stuff that will set this stuff alight. And you can burn it quickly and you can make more money as quickly as possible. So what do you find? You have to gather plastic. Now, a lot of our electronics are actually encased in plastic. You know, a TV is just a big plastic box, for instance, or an old computer, an old laptop. Or you have, say, styrofoam from refrigerator foam, right?

And this is the stuff that's being set alight. This is what's used as kindling. And it's producing this really disgusting, acrid, black smog smoke, which is billowing up into the sky. And then it's heading directly towards the slum where 60,000 people live. At any given time, you have 10 to 15 of these fires being burned. This is happening all day, every day. It's a really astonishing thing to witness. Mm-hmm.

And as you write, the burner boys who are doing this are just, the money they're making is a pittance. It might be $2 or $3 a day. And to what cost to them, though, in their health?

Well, a lot of this remains to be seen. I mean, this really only began 20 years ago. But Burnham boys that I met complained about coughing up blood at night. They complained that their limbs would lock in a sort of icy sensation. They didn't quite understand why. They have effectively no access to any kind of health care whatsoever. They live in a slum that is

poor sanitation, which has enormous numbers of mosquitoes everywhere. The food itself is some of the most poisonous food you can possibly imagine. It's, again, I hate to paint such an image, but it's an incredibly bleak place to be. Mm-hmm.

Well, we are speaking with Alexander Clapp today. He's author of the new book, Waste Wars, The Wild Afterlife of Your Trash. And after reading the book and listening to this conversation, I guarantee you will never look at what you're sending out your door as trash the same way ever again. So we have a lot more to talk about when we come back. This is On Point. On Point.

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You're back with On Point. I'm Meghna Chakrabarty and Alexander Clapp is with us today. His new book is Waste Wars, The Wild Afterlife of Your Trash. And we have an excerpt of it, by the way, at onpointradio.org. So, Alexander, I can almost smell the acrid smoke, right, and feel the grease and the dirt that is generated by these toxic electronic waste fires in Accra and Ghana.

But then, of course, the obvious question is, how do these mountains of electronic waste from everywhere, but let's talk about from the United States, even get to Agbagbloshi? The truth is that we do not sort of send our electronic waste to Ghana and just dump it in a landfill without them knowing. They are knowingly on the receiving end of this material. And in fact, they are importing it and sometimes even paying for it. In the 1990s, something really interesting happened in Ghana, where

Its leaders looked around and they saw a new kind of globalization opening up. This was a globalization in which the primary dichotomy was not between states of the north, the global north, for instance, and states of the global south, for instance, as it historically had been. This was between countries that could get on the internet and countries which could not. We have plenty of testimony in the 1990s of Ghanaian leaders saying, look, we really need to become the cyber economy of Africa.

We are English speaking. We don't have many tribal conflicts. This is a place that's safer for an investment. How do we do this? How do we get our people on the Internet? The problem is that in Ghana, the average wage is a dollar a day or less. So what did Ghana do? It began incentivizing the import of secondhand electronics however it could.

slashed import duties, it lowered taxes, for instance. And the idea was that if we bring in all these secondhand electronics, we're going to get gun hands on the internet, we're going to become this great cyber economy of Africa.

Now there was only one problem with that logic, which is the electronics that we throw away, we're generally doing that for a reason. The battery is broken, the screen is broken, there's activation locks, there's all sorts of things within our modern electronics that make them work for less and less time. And so the stuff that was being sent to Ghana, either by Ghanaians themselves or by Western waste brokers, as much of a quarter of this stuff doesn't work.

One thing that's very interesting about the waste trade is that, you know, we tend to think of this stuff that we surround ourselves with, whether that's a computer or whether that's a television remote, as these inanimate, inert objects that aren't really very dangerous.

But when waste travels to a poor country, when it heads to a developing country, it stops being a solid object. You have these groups of burner boys who are trying to extract some value from these electronics. What do they do? They begin processing that. Processing is just a fancy word for they're setting a lot of this stuff on fire. And that's when all of the contaminants, all the toxins, all the additives, all the flame retardants, everything that goes into what we surround ourselves with every day, it's really dangerous.

This is when the stuff starts leaking out. It goes into local ecosystems. It goes into water systems. It goes into the air. It goes into the food supply, as you mentioned. This stuff is effectively eternal. This stuff will never get out of these places. It's exactly the reason why that they're not disposed of here in the United States, right? Yeah.

Exactly. It would be far too dangerous, not profitable. A lot of this stuff, especially plastic, cannot be recycled effectively. The answer for the last 30 years has been to send this stuff to a poor country and forget about it. The story that you tell about why so many secondhand electronics come into Ghana makes a lot of sense, right? A nation wanting to become part of the information age. But

But even now when it's known, as you said, that what, 25 percent of it at least is unusable. Why is it still coming into Ghana? Who's making the money off of it? Because these systems don't persist unless someone is doing well from it. So, for example, who are the waste brokers that you talked about? It's a really good question. And I think the most one of the most important things to understand about the waste trade is that the dichotomy isn't between rich countries and poor countries per se.

You also have importers in these poor countries who are every bit as part of the problem as the people on the exporting end of this stuff. Now, in a place like Ghana, why can you do this at profit? How can you make money off of this if a quarter of the stuff you're being sent doesn't effectively work? Well, you do it at scale.

If you have lax import restrictions, if you have customs brokers or inspectors who can be paid off, if you can pay your labor effectively nothing, if you have environmental regulations which are effectively recommendations, this stuff, if you keep doing it at scale, eventually there's enough money to be made. You can extract large amounts of copper from our electronics. Now, what happens to that copper when it gets extracted by the burner boys?

This stuff gets shipped out of Ghana. It'll probably be sold to maybe Nigerian middlemen, and then it'll be sold off to almost certainly to Asia. What gets left behind in Ghana? It's just this haze of pollution, the most polluted eggs you can ever imagine, eternal contamination in the water and the air. I think one of the great tragedies of Ghana's attempt to become this kind of cyber economy of Africa is

is that in some ways it's circled back into this older colonial era economy in which it acted almost exclusively as a sort of exporter of raw material to rich countries whose benefits it did not ultimately see. Right. And I mean, that colonial analogy goes even further, that really what Ghanaians themselves are adding to this market is their labor, right?

That's right. And I would even add there's a further twist here, right? Like what is Ghana historically known for? It's been historically known for gold. Right. One of the really striking things when you see these electronics, you know, there's tiny little bits of gold in smartphones, for instance. It's not inconceivable that some of that gold actually came from Ghana first, right? And so you have this gold which is returning to Ghana in the form of old electronics, and then it's getting exported out again. So Ghana's kind of the knot at the center of a globalized figure eight. Wow.

You know, and just I wanted to be clear to listeners that when I said they're adding their labor, I didn't mean as like as like receiving positive return from from that labor. Right. The colonial model here is you you're forced to give your labor and then you get received none of the benefit. Right. Because that gets exported elsewhere. We've been focusing a lot on Ghana just because it was such a compelling example in your book, but it's one of many. So I wanted to go through a couple of others.

And maybe we can do it in somewhat like of a lightning round style. Because, you know, the thing is, is that, as you said, this isn't necessary. The lines about who sends the waste and who receives it isn't actually that easily drawn. Right. OK, so. So, for example, here's one. Everything from, you know, computers, as we talked to all the way up to cruise ships. So when a cruise ship is decommissioned and no longer usable in any sort of secondary way.

Where does that old cruise ship go? Cruise ships will disproportionately go to Turkey.

Now, I spent a month in Turkey investigating this. This is a really wild industry because there's a little port on the western coast of Turkey, not just north of the port of Izmir, where any number of cruise ship companies based out of Florida, for instance, will send their old cruise ships after five or ten years whenever they decide that these things are no longer seaworthy or no longer appealing to a new generation of cruise goers.

This is an industry that's called shipwrecking. Statistically, it's the most dangerous industry on Earth, statistically deadlier than mining, because shipwrecking is done almost entirely by hand. When you go to Turkey, when you see these huge behemoth cruise ships being deconstructed, it's a really surreal sight. You stand on top of a mountain overlooking the otherwise beautiful Aegean Sea.

And you see hundreds, even thousands of these Turks who are filing into these cruise ships, which are the size of city blocks. It's like a monstrous, huge construction project done rapidly in reverse, where these men carry these sort of lightsabers, and they're taking apart the steel from these ships deck by deck. And the steel falls as many as 10 stories from the top of a cruise ship into the sea. The other sort of astonishing thing that I thought was that many of these Turks were

had never seen the sea before in their lives. They come from the middle of Anatolia. They sort of bust out to this port and before they even really understand what's happening to them, they're filed into these huge cruise ships for dismantling.

That's what I mean by there are tiers of exploitation here. It's not simply North, you know, rich countries versus poor countries. Within these developing countries, you have people who are making tremendous profits off the stuff we throw away at the expense of the poorest people in the poorest countries. Right. I mean, maybe the cruise ship example is even is one even easier to understand about the the profit incentive here. Right. Because you're talking about, you know.

I don't know, hundreds and thousands of tons of steel, carpet, wood, whatever. I mean, like you said, it's several floating city blocks and everything that comes with it, which some of it, I guess, has a high reuse value.

Steel is a genuinely recyclable material. So yeah, I mean, in a country like Bangladesh, which is one of the major destinations of old ships in the world, I think as much as a quarter of the steel that they generate actually comes from these ships, which have been floating around the world for the last 10 or 15 years. Now, again, this is a genuinely circular economy. And on the face of things, this is good for the planet, but it comes at huge human cost. Okay, here's another one.

Car batteries. And batteries in general, but car batteries in this case, because, you know, in the United States, people are always told to, you know, there's very specific ways to dispose of your batteries. You're not supposed to just toss it into the landfill because of the chemicals that can leach out of them. So what happens to car batteries in general when they leave the United States?

This is one of those examples of how a certain form of trash becomes like a kind of barometer of global inequalities. You know, in the 1970s and 1980s, we sent a lot of our old car batteries to Taiwan, for instance, for processing. And again, there's that word processing, which implies a kind of efficient way of extracting material, but it's often extremely messy, extremely toxic spewing.

In the 1990s and 2000s, as Taiwan became more prosperous, it said, we don't need to take this stuff anymore. So where did this stuff start going? Disproportionately to Latin America, to countries like Peru, as well as countries like Mexico. And again, why is this done? This is done because we could never safely, efficiently, or profitably recycle those car batteries within the United States itself.

Okay, there's another one, a big one, and that's plastics, of course, of all kinds. You know, what was interesting is that for a while, and correct me if I'm wrong, because I was under the impression that a lot of supposedly recycled plastics were going to China, which had a big sort of processing, as you say, market for plastics, until the Chinese decided they didn't want specifically like America's garbage anymore. Right.

So where is all of this plastic going now? Yeah, exactly. So for almost 30 years, China was a recipient of the overwhelming amount of plastic waste intended for recycling on Earth. In 2016, the Chinese Communist Party said, we're not doing this anymore. They cited the exorbitant amount of pollution, air pollution, water pollution, the microplastics problem, the toxics, contaminants.

And so the carpet was pulled out from this huge billion dollar business, which was reliant on sending our plastics to a poorer country and insisting that all of this stuff was getting recycled. Now, what happens after 2017 when that law goes into effect is really interesting. You have this kind of mad scramble where all of these rich countries, the United States, Canada, Germany, which for the last 30 years have been exporting the bulk of their plastics abroad, suddenly need a new place to send this stuff.

The United States starts sending huge quantities of plastic to Malaysia, for instance, as well as to Mexico. Turkey, on the edge of the European Union, becomes the biggest recipient of British and European plastic waste in the world. Plastic exports to Africa, for instance, quadruple.

One of the things that's interesting about this sort of change in the plastic waste trade is that who are the importers of this stuff? It actually happens to be a lot of the Chinese who were formerly doing this in places like Guangdong. After 2017, what they did is they packed up their operations and they moved to other countries. So now you have this kind of Chinese diaspora of plastic waste importers operating in places like Tijuana or Port Klang.

have basically just moved their operations abroad. They're doing what they were doing for 30 years, only they're doing it outside of China, which will no longer permit this pollution. Now, I'm going to presume that some of it actually does get recycled, but a lot of it doesn't. So what happens to that? A lot of it doesn't get recycled. I mean, as much as 30 to 50 percent of this stuff will get dumped in a field or torched in a cement kiln. Even when this process allegedly works,

It's the process of recycling where the dangers come out in plastic. The process of mechanically or even chemically reducing our plastic, this is what is sending all of those toxins, all of those contaminants, all of those additives, the thousands of things that go into modern plastics, which are very poorly regulated. This is what comes out during the recycling process. It gets added into new plastic that's being created. It goes into local water systems. It goes into the air system.

This is in addition to the microplastics problem. There was a recent study in Vietnam, for instance, that found that as much as 10% of plastic that you even attempt to recycle is actually lost in the process to microplastics. Now, all of that stuff is just going into the water. It's making its way into the oceans. We will never get this stuff out. There's a reason why, by some estimates, there's more plastic than plankton in the Pacific Ocean right now. Yeah.

And this is, we're talking about plastic waste imports. That's in addition to the domestic plastic use in all the countries that you've mentioned, right? Right. So I think there's three very important things to understand about the waste trade. The first is that, especially with respect to our plastic, this stuff is not very valuable. Think about how much plastic there is out there. What is valuable is in being able to move this stuff and to being able to divert it. That's where the money is in this industry. Right.

The second is, it's almost better to think of the waste trade as the toxins trade. That's what's really getting moved here. And the third thing is that the waste trade is fundamentally illogical.

Tell me in what world it makes sense that in a country like Malaysia, for instance, where a piece of plastic, a domestically consumed piece of plastic, is as liable to ending up in the ocean as it is in a landfill or a recycling center. Why on earth should this place be the biggest importer of American plastic waste in the world? This makes absolutely no sense. We send our garbage to those very countries that cannot handle their own waste outputs. Hmm.

Well, Alexander Klepp is with us today, and we're talking about what he sees in his global travels about the international waste trade. It's all chronicled in his new book, Waste Wars, The Wild Afterlife of Your Trash. And we'll talk a lot more when we come back. This is On Point. On Point.

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Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile with a message for everyone paying big wireless way too much. Please, for the love of everything good in this world, stop. With Mint, you can get premium wireless for just $15 a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird. Okay, one judgment.

Anyway, give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch. Upfront payment of $45 for three-month plan, equivalent to $15 per month required. Intro rate first three months only, then full price plan options available. Taxes and fees extra. See full terms at mintmobile.com. This is On Point. I'm Magna Chakrabarty, and Alexander Klepp is our guest today. He's author of Waste Wars, The Wild Afterlife of Your Trash.

You know, Alexander, as I was reading through your book and, you know, how you're describing, I guess, particularly in, what, Indonesia, these, you say, hellscapes, right, of imported Western waste, where there's, like, plastic up to, I don't know, your knees, your waist, of every possible thing you could imagine. Do you know what popped into my mind as I was reading that? No. I mean, how could you know, right? But...

WALL-E, the movie. Okay. Have you seen it? I have not, no. Oh, okay, okay. So it's a brilliant, brilliant animated film from many, many years ago, and it's about a little robot, a trash robot, essentially, on future planet Earth. And what has happened on future planet Earth is human beings have created so much trash that we have to decamp the planet. Right.

And jet off into the outer edges of the solar system. And all that's left behind is one little, the last functioning little trash robot. His name is Wally. And he continues to do his job every day. He like powers up in the morning and putters around cities that are nothing but skyscraper-sized piles of waste. And he makes little waste cubes and organizes them.

It's a really beautiful and touching movie and a warning also, I think, to everyone about like that. That future is not only not impossible to imagine, but you've already described it as being present now in some of the places that you visited. Right. Just like the like being almost drowning human beings, almost drowning in trash that's imported into their countries.

So here's my question. You've used the word toxics a couple of times. I mean, you also write about in the book how most, if not all, other forms of toxic waste are highly regulated in terms of how they can move around the world. Why do you think that's not true for these kinds of wastes that you've been talking about, that we know there are toxins within them, for example? I mean, one thing that's really interesting about the waste trade is that

In the 1980s, for instance, the United States was in the habit of sending huge quantities of toxic waste and steel drums to Latin American countries. We effectively bribed these countries to take our waste.

Western European countries were approaching former African colonies and saying, "Look, if you take our toxic waste, we'll reduce your debt. We'll build you a school. We'll build you a hospital. We'll give you hundreds of millions of dollars." That's how the waste trade actually began in the 1980s with these outlandishly toxic forms of waste that were being sent to the global south.

What's interesting is that in 1989, developing countries, dozens of them, they band together and they say, enough is enough. We're not going to be on the receiving end of this stuff. We don't see any real benefit from it. This has to end. In 1992, something gets ratified called the Basel Convention, and eventually gets signed in 1994 by every major country on earth, with the exception of the United States. The Basel Convention says that

You can no longer send toxic waste from a developed country to a developing country. This becomes illegal.

At the same time that people are talking about Basel and it's being passed, you have this other waste trade that begins developing. And this isn't really industrial waste. This is actually post-consumer waste. So this is the stuff that you and I would throw away on any given day, a plastic bag, a plastic fork. And I think what's striking is that there was very little recognition at the time of just how toxic this stuff was. The petrochemical industry at just this time was telling us that all of this stuff was perfectly recyclable.

The problem is, you know, if you broke plastic down, if you took all the additives of the flame retardants within plastic and you put it into steel drums, you could never ship that stuff to a developing country. But if it's in the form of a plastic fork or whatever it is, that's fine.

And so that's what's really striking and even ironic and tragic about the waste trade is that we knew this was wrong in the 1980s. And there was a robust conversation in the United States about how this was very undermining, even from a foreign policy angle, to send our waste to foreign countries.

And yet it never stopped. It actually exploded in value. I mean, is that what you're talking about in the book when you write about as long as there's some seeming hope that there is a future use for even a portion of the compounds that make up, say, I don't know, a plastic milk bottle, that that's one of the reasons why this international waste trade is going to persist? Yeah.

Exactly. I mean, waste brokers are extremely clever with the language they use and they don't operate in the world of trash. What they send are recyclable materials or reusable materials. There's this kind of rhetorical gymnastics that happens where the stuff you throw away is no longer garbage. And even if it's known that this stuff is going to end up in a country that cannot handle its own domestic waste outputs, where the likely fate of this stuff is to be torched, to be dumped, this still persists. Yeah.

You know, the China example is really interesting here because – and thank you for adding the details about when the Chinese government, which it was relatively recently, decided to stop taking Western waste. That makes me wonder about other countries now that are continuing to import this garbage essentially. I mean we talked about the incentives that the waste brokers have and maybe even the meager incentives that the human beings, the people who are quote-unquote processing this stuff have.

may have. But given the tremendous costs that you've been outlining to the country and its people when this stuff comes in, what's stopping...

or Indonesia or Bangladesh, as you're saying, from just saying, no, like China, we too will no longer be the receptacle for the stuff that Western countries don't want? I would offer two answers. The first is these countries generally have other problems which they're concentrating on. They're attempting to build health care or they're attempting to build roads or they're attempting to...

On the sort of hierarchy of even environmental problems, trash tends to get relegated pretty low. The second is that what you see increasingly is that countries that have actually even banned plastic waste import are still on the receiving end of huge quantities of this stuff. I'll give the example of Indonesia, where I spent a month. You go into the middle of Java, into these beautiful mountains.

And what you see before you are these huge plantations of Western plastic waste. Now, this is strange because in 2019, I believe, Indonesia said, look, we're not taking this stuff anymore. We learned from China. This stuff is dangerous. It's bad. It's toxic. We're not accepting it anymore. So how is all this plastic waste from the United States getting to Indonesia?

Well, Indonesia is still the recipient of huge quantities of secondhand paper. We send a ton of our old junk mail, for instance, to Indonesia. This is a genuinely recircular economy. It gets sent to Indonesia, gets pulped down. It produces new paper. This is on the face of things good for the planet. The problem, and this maybe goes back to your Wally example, is that plastic is now so ubiquitous. It's just everywhere. We need a place to put all this stuff.

That increasingly our secondhand paper shipments to Indonesia are as much as 30 to 50% plastic. So the stuff that we're sending to Indonesia, which is a genuine circular economy, which should be helping the planet, is now full of all of this stuff that is actually just destroying the planet.

Now, what happens when it gets to Java? It's way too voluminous to even attempt to recycle. Well, these towns in Java, which specialize in taking this secondhand plastic, this American plastic, these dog food bags, meat packaging, you name it, they then sell this to towns that are in the business of producing tofu. They use it as fuel in their furnaces. This is extremely toxic. I mean, the most proximate...

Wow.

You know, obviously the source of this problem is just the sheer enormous volume of stuff, right?

But you also issue, I'd say, kind of a challenge in the book. And the challenge is for those of us in affluent countries who are not only producing, but the consumers who are driving the constant generation of more and more waste to, as you say, get real with ourselves. Because part of the hypocrisy here, as you point out, is that we actually...

We actually, as nations, we kind of know how bad the waste is, which is exactly why we send it away. Because we don't want to have to live with the realities of what that waste does, what it means, and how it could have an impact on our own environments. Exactly. Yeah. I mean, a lot of people point to, you know, you need to use plastic less in your day-to-day life. All of which is true, I think. You know, we should be avoiding avoidable plastic at all costs.

But I think the real onus, I think the way to really solve this problem is to start at the production level. We need to produce less plastic. You have these beach cleanups or you have these ocean cleanups, which is fine, but we're forever going to be a dog chasing its own tail unless we actually stop producing so much plastic in the first place.

But what are people supposed to do, though? I mean, in the interim, like you said, it's impossible. Plastics are impossible to fully eliminate from your lives. Even for someone who tries to, like, say, use their cell phone for as long as they possibly can until it simply just won't get updated anymore. And it has to go somewhere. I mean, I feel like people, consumers are also almost trapped within this same giant system that you've been describing. Yeah.

Exactly. And if you look at the history of plastic, how this stuff actually was sold to us, no one in 1950 was sitting around saying, you know, I really wish that this steel fork was made out of plastic. This stuff was imposed on us. I think there's a few reasons for hope, though. The first is that, you know, many people listening to this probably have lived in a world where plastic was not nearly so ubiquitous. You only have to really go back to the 1950s.

to see a world in which plastic wasn't constantly everywhere, everywhere around us. The second thing is, again, even if you don't care about the planet, that's fine. But presumably you care about ourselves. And what plastic is doing to ourselves is also really dangerous. I think...

The statistics now show that we have a teaspoon of plastic in our brains at any given moment. Plastic is in our bone marrow, it's in our blood, it's in our reproductive systems. You really want to avoid this stuff at personal cost, no matter what you can do, no matter what you do.

I'm not one of these people who proposes getting rid of all forms of plastic. I think the medical industry has a lot of really important forms of plastic that it uses. The automobile and the aviation industry also use important forms of plastic. The point is to really try to avoid single-use, avoidable plastic. I think single-use is something like 50% of all plastic production right now. And most of the stuff is gratuitous. We don't need it. There's a perfectly fine substitute, paper. I mean, paper, you can...

you know, roll up and toss into a river and eventually degrade and you'll never see it again. But plastic, this stuff sticks around for thousands, even tens of thousands of years. Mm-hmm.

Well, I wanted to have you close the hour, Alexander, with the story of the people that you met in these different countries who are also trying to, you know, fight back against it or to raise awareness of the impact that the flood of Western waste into their countries is having. Can you tell us the story of the Museum of Foreign Garbage? Yeah.

This is in Java. It relates to the story that I just mentioned with all of this Western plastic that gets sent to Java, much of which is just useless plastic. And deep in the highlands of Java, where you would never expect to see such a thing, there's a museum of all things.

And it is a museum that showcases all of the Western plastic waste that keeps getting sent to Java. It's run by an extraordinary environmentalist named Priggy Arisandi, who has made it his personal crusade to really stop this, to stop this awful plastic importation, which is destroying his island.

And you go into this museum and hanging from the ceiling, there's this huge fish and its guts are open and its rib cage is open. And out of that rib cage is poured, it's coming all of this Western plastic waste. And it's all the things that, you know, you might throw away today, whether it's, you know, a package of candy or, you know, dog food or whatever it is. And it's sort of leaking onto the floor. It's this huge mass on the floor and,

And it's this really startling example of, you know, this stuff that was tossed away into a paper recycling bin 5,000 miles away has ended up in Indonesia and in all places. It's now in a museum. And it's a testament to how the stuff we throw away lives a kind of strange secret afterlife that is often very damaging to unsuspecting populations.

As you write, it's coming out of that fish is everything from...

packaging from Sour Patch Kids candy, right, to Amazon envelopes. We have spent multiple hours before on this show talking about how online shopping has made an extant problem even worse. But what really got me, and this is actually near one of the last chapters of your book, is that in order to create this museum of foreign garbage, you

Arasandi got the Pringles cans, et cetera, from the local paper factory? Yep. And he had to buy them. They made him buy them. And it just goes to show that people will go to every length possible to make money off your trash. Even if it's forcing an environmentalist to buy it in order to make a point about how dangerous the trash is. Precisely. Yeah.

I'm curious, has seeing all this stuff firsthand, right, and talking to the people who are living with or wading through these lagoons of trash that we send out around the planet, has it changed how you live, Alexander? I definitely attempt to use far less plastic than I ever did. And again, this relates to sort of personal health, but also personal

I think I have a clear understanding of the ramifications that the stuff you throw away, there is no away. One man's trash really isn't another man's treasure. The Sour Patch Kids or the Amazon envelope that you throw away is very likely to undergo an extremely arduous carbon-spewing journey from one end of the earth to another.

And yeah, I mean, as soon as I realized through my travels that I was this progenitor of this huge process that was hurting or damaging someone on the other end of the earth and certainly doing huge environmental damage, I attempted to rein in as much plastic use as possible.

Well, Alexander Klepp is author of Waste Wars, The Wild Afterlife of Your Trash. And as I said, we have an excerpt of it at onpointradio.org. Alexander, thank you so much for joining us. Meghna, thank you very much for having me. I'm Meghna Chakrabarty. This is On Point.