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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Business -> 
Waste imports plunge from a year ago
    2018-04-24  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

CHINA’S scrap metal imports in March fell by 24.6 percent from a year ago as new curbs on foreign solid waste came into effect, while waste paper imports slid by 54.2 percent and the country imported zero waste plastic.

New impurity limits — set at 1 percent for nonferrous metal, and at 0.5 percent for paper, plastics and ferrous metal — were announced by China last year and had already impacted shipments but only officially came into force March 1.

China imported a total of 570,000 tons of scrap metal last month, the General Administration of Customs said yesterday, versus 760,000 tons a year ago and 440,000 tons in February.

Scrap copper imports were at 220,000 tons last month, down 37.7 percent from March 2017.

China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environment last week confirmed that imports of Category 7 scrap copper — such as coiled copper cable and waste motors — would be banned from the end of this year. Import quotas for scrap copper have already been falling.

Meanwhile, China imported 180,000 tons of aluminium scrap last month, up from 119,737 tons in February but down 5.6 percent year on year.

China said April 2 that it would impose a 25-percent tariff on aluminium scrap from the United States in response to U.S. steel and aluminium tariffs imposed in March.

Waste paper imports were 1.42 million tons last month, down 54.2 percent from a year earlier but up from 1.27 million tons in February, while waste plastic imports were at zero, and were just 10,000 tons for the entire first quarter after coming in at virtually zero in February.

China’s overall imports of foreign solid waste — including waste paper, waste plastics and scrap metal — fell by roughly half from a year ago to 2 million tons in March, data earlier this month showed.(SD-Agencies)

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