The US sends lots of plastic trash overseas. Malaysia just said no thanks
American scrap brokers sent more than 35,000 tonnes of plastic waste to Malaysia in 2024.
KUALA LUMPUR - In the shadow of US President Donald Trump's tariff fights, a different kind of trade war is playing out involving candy wrappers and plastic bottles.
On July 1, Malaysia, which received more discarded plastic from rich nations than any other developing country in 2024, effectively banned all shipments of plastic waste from the United States.
That might not seem like a big deal. But the United States has increasingly relied on countries like Malaysia to deal with plastic trash.
American scrap brokers sent more than 35,000 tonnes of plastic waste to Malaysia in 2024, according to trade data analysed by the Basel Action Network, a non-profit group that tracks plastic waste issues.
In 2024, after seizing more than 100 shipping containers of hazardous materials sent from Los Angeles that had been improperly labeled as raw materials, Malaysian environment minister Nik Nazmi told reporters that 'we do not want Malaysia to be the world's rubbish bin'.
The country's Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry did not respond to a request for comment July 1.
Turmoil in the little-known trade in plastic waste has its roots in a decision by China in 2018, for the same reasons as Malaysia, to ban imports of wastepaper and plastic.
Before that, China had for years
accepted as much as half of the globe's discarded plastic and paper.
Western nations have since struggled with a buildup of plastic trash. The United States recycles less than 10 per cent of the plastic it discards.
Food and other contamination in plastic waste hinders recycling, and a significant portion of plastic, like chip bags that contain layers of different plastics and other materials, simply can't be recycled economically.
The rest ends up in landfills, is burned or is shipped overseas. And while new overseas destinations have emerged, a growing number of countries are starting to say no to trash. In 2025, Thailand and Indonesia also announced bans on plastic waste imports.
The world produces nearly 500 million tonnes of plastic each year, more than double the amount from two decades ago, and a growing amount of plastic waste is turning up on coastlines and riverbanks, as well as in whales, birds and other animals that ingest them.
Researchers have estimated that one garbage truck's worth of plastic enters the ocean every minute.
China's ban 'sent shock waves through the global plastic waste trade,' said professor Tony R Walker at the School for Resource and Environmental Studies at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, who researches the global flow of plastic waste.
The countries that started to accept that discarded plastic 'quickly became overwhelmed,' he said. Much of that plastic trash ends up dumped in landfills or is burned, which releases harmful air pollution, or is simply released into the environment.
People in rich countries may assume the plastic they diligently separate is being recycled, he said, something he termed 'wish cycling'. However, instead of going into a recycling stream, 'a lot of it gets redirected to waste,' he said.
Malaysia's amended Customs Act bans all plastic waste shipments from countries that have not signed the Basel Convention, a global agreement that regulates hazardous waste, including plastic.
That puts the United States, the only major country that is not a party to the agreement, in a particularly tricky spot.
The amended law also sets stringent restrictions on plastic waste imports from other countries, saying they must contain only one type of plastic, with at most two per cent contamination, to ensure that the imported plastics are recycled and not discarded. That level would be challenging to meet for any plastic waste collected from consumers.
In an email to clients sent June 20 and shared with The New York Times, chief executive Steve Wong of global plastic waste broker Fukutomi said shipments of scrap plastic to Malaysia had already 'come to a virtual standstill'.
Ross Eisenberg, president of America's Plastic Makers, an industry group, said the effects of Malaysia's import policy on plastic waste remained unclear.
Nevertheless, 'our industry remains focused on scaling up the use of recycled plastics in new products,' he said. 'These efforts support American jobs and drive economic growth, while conserving our natural resources and helping to prevent plastic pollution.'
Malaysia's ban on plastic waste imports from the United States was prompted by the discovery of hundreds of containers filled with hazardous electronic and plastic waste that had been falsely declared as raw materials in order to bypass the country's trade control laws, said researcher Wong Pui Yi at the Basel Action Network.
But local industry associations have urged the government to lift the ban on clean, recyclable plastic imports, arguing that the imports are necessary to help manufacturers meet their recycled-content targets.
Brands like Nestlé, Coca-Cola and Pepsi have committed to using more recycled material in their products, said president CC Cheah of Malaysian Plastics Manufacturers Association, and the Malaysian recycling industry could still play a role.
Dr Kate O'Neill, a professor of environmental science, policy and management at the University of California, Berkeley, said Malaysia's ban could mean that plastic waste starts flowing to other countries that are less able to handle the waste.
Monitoring will be important, she said. 'The recycling industry still hasn't caught up with the disruption, so these exports are still needed.'
That's why experts increasingly say that, on top of investing in recycling infrastructure, policies are needed to help rein in plastic production itself, for example by curbing demand for single-use plastics.
Some countries negotiating a new treaty aimed at curbing plastic pollution have also called for caps on plastic production.
That could come from packaging designs that cut down on plastic use, measures like plastic bag bans and overall policies that make manufacturers more responsible for the waste their products generate.
Those policies have been spreading across the United States as well as globally. On July 1, a law went into effect in Illinois that prohibits large hotels from providing small, single-use plastic bottles for toiletries like shampoo and conditioner. Smaller hotels have until 2026 to comply.
Also on July 1, Delaware began prohibiting restaurants from providing foam food containers, plastic beverage stirrers and plastic cocktail and sandwich picks, and requires that single-use plastic straws are only given out at the customer's request. NY TIMES
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
22 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Trump announces Vietnam trade deal with 20% import tariff
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Vietnam will also pay a 40 per cent tariff on transshipping, said US President Donald Trump. WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump said he had reached a trade deal with Vietnam, following weeks of intense diplomacy between the two nations and ahead of a deadline next week that would have seen higher tariffs imposed on the country's imports. 'I just made a Trade Deal with Vietnam. Details to follow,' Mr Trump said in a Truth Social post on July 2 . The deal with Vietnam would be just the third announced following agreements with the UK and China as trading partners race to cut agreements with the US ahead of a July 9 deadline. Mr Trump had imposed a 46 per cent duty on Vietnam as part of his initial rollout of so-called reciprocal tariffs in early April, then pared it back to 10 per cent to allow time for negotiations. The South-east Asian nation has seen its sales to US markets surge in recent years, partly because manufacturers shifted production there from China. It is a major supplier of textiles and sportswear, hosting factories for companies such as Nike Inc, Gap Inc and Lululemon Athletica Inc. Vietnam was the sixth-biggest supplier of US imports in 2024 , sending goods worth almost US$137 billion (S$174 billion), according to Census Bureau data. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Singapore and Cambodia to expand collaboration in renewable energy, carbon markets and agri-trade Singapore From camping to mentorship, Singapore scouts mark 115th anniversary of the youth movement Singapore Ong Beng Seng's court hearing rescheduled one day before he was expected to plead guilty World Sean 'Diddy' Combs convicted on prostitution counts but cleared of more serious charges Singapore ByteDance food poisoning: Catering firm convicted after cockroach infestation found on premises Singapore Teen, 17, to be charged with allegedly trespassing on MRT tracks Singapore Granddaughter of Hin Leong founder O.K. Lim fails to keep 3 insurance policies from creditors' reach Singapore Man on trial for raping drunken woman after offering to drive her and her friend home The deal with Vietnam was struck after weeks of discussions during which the US pressured the country to get tougher on trade fraud, ensure stricter enforcement against the transshipment of Chinese products, and also pushed for the removal of non-tariff barriers. Vietnam offered to remove all tariffs and repeatedly promised to purchase more American goods. Senior Vietnamese officials flew to the US to rally support and sign deals, including for US$3 billion of agricultural goods. The trade minister also wooed executives from Nike, Gap and others to encourage them to get behind negotiation efforts. Brands raced to move manufacturing to Vietnam over the past decade as US-China tensions escalated. The industrial shift from China to Vietnam also helped build the kind of massive trade gap that made it a prime tariff target for Mr Trump. In 2024, Vietnam's trade surplus with the US was the third-largest globally on a country basis behind only China and Mexico. Shipments in May jumped 35 per cent as firms sought to get goods onto vessels as quickly as possible ahead of the deadline. BLOOMBERG
Business Times
25 minutes ago
- Business Times
Trump tax-cut plan returns to US House, Republicans divided on Bill
[WASHINGTON] The debate within President Donald Trump's Republican Party over a massive tax-cut and spending Bill returns to the House of Representatives on Wednesday (Jul 2), as party leaders try to overcome internal divisions and meet a self-imposed Jul 4 deadline. The Senate passed the legislation, which nonpartisan analysts say will add US$3.4 trillion to the nation's debt over the next decade, by the narrowest possible margin on Tuesday after intense debate on the Bill's hefty price tag and substantial cuts to the Medicaid healthcare programme. Similar divides exist in the House, which Republicans control by a 220-212 margin and where a fractious caucus has regularly bucked its leadership in recent years – though members have so far not rejected major Trump priorities. 'The House will work quickly to pass the One Big Beautiful Bill that enacts President Trump's full America First agenda by the Fourth of July,' House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a statement on Tuesday, citing the Bill's extension of Trump's 2017 individual tax cuts and increased funding for the military and immigration enforcement. The House Rules Committee advanced the Senate Bill overnight by a 7-6 vote with two Republicans – hardliners Chip Roy and Ralph Norman – voting against it. Johnson can afford to lose no more than three votes if all members are present, though a series of storms on Tuesday night complicated lawmakers' travel plans, prompting some to drive through the night towards the Capitol. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Hardliner anger over spending The loudest Republican objections against the Bill come from party hardliners angry that it does not sufficiently cut spending and includes a US$5 trillion increase in the nation's debt ceiling, which lawmakers must address in the coming months or risk a devastating default on the nation's US$36.2 trillion debt. 'What the Senate did was unconscionable,' Norman, a South Carolina Republican, said on Tuesday. One of several fiscal hawks who spoke out against the Senate Bill's higher price tag, he accused the Senate of handing out 'goodie bags' of spending to satisfy holdouts. Trump for weeks has pushed for passage ahead of Friday's Independence Day holiday and kept up the pressure on Wednesday. 'Republicans, don't let the Radical Left Democrats push you around. We've got all the cards, and we are going to use them,' Trump said in a social media post. Democrats are united in opposition to the Bill, saying that its tax breaks disproportionately benefit the wealthy while cutting services that lower and middle-income Americans rely on. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that almost 12 million people could lose health insurance as a result of the Bill. 'This is the largest assault on American healthcare in history,' Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told reporters on Tuesday, pledging that his party will use 'all procedural and legislative options' to try to stop – or delay – passage. The version of the Bill passed by the Senate on Tuesday would add more to the debt than the version first passed by the House in May. The CBO on Tuesday raised its estimate for how much the Senate Bill would increase the budget deficit through 2045 by US$100 billion, to US$3.4 trillion. The Bill includes more than US$900 million in cuts to the Medicaid programme for low-income Americans. Those cuts also raised concerns among some House Republicans. 'I will not support a final Bill that eliminates vital funding our hospitals rely on,' Republican Representative David Valadao of California said before Senate passage. Timing difficulties But some House Republicans worried about social safety-net cuts could find solace in the Senate's last-minute decision to set aside more money for rural hospitals, funding Representative Nick Langworthy, a New York Republican, called 'a lifeline that will be very helpful to districts like mine'. Any changes made by the House would require another Senate vote, making it all but impossible to meet the Jul 4 deadline. Any Republican public opposition to the Bill risks irking Trump, as was the case when the president slammed Senator Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican who announced his retirement after coming out in opposition to the Bill. Another former Trump ally, the world's richest person Elon Musk, this week resumed an active campaign against the Bill over social media, blasting its deficit-building effects. That has reignited a feud between Trump and Musk. REUTERS

Straits Times
27 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Azerbaijan demands punishment for death of brothers in Russian police custody
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox BAKU - Azerbaijan demanded on Wednesday that Russia punish those responsible for the deaths of two Azerbaijani men in police custody, refusing to back down in a growing diplomatic dispute. The South Caucasus country summoned the Russian ambassador in Baku to protest over the "illegal actions" of Russian police and accuse Moscow of undermining bilateral relations. "It was reiterated that Azerbaijan expects a comprehensive and objective investigation from Russia into the violations committed by Russian law enforcement authorities and the punishment of those responsible," the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said. Russia said certain forces, which it did not specify, were trying to wreck the relationship between the two neighbours, and urged Baku to repair it. The diplomatic furore highlights a growing assertiveness toward Moscow on the part of Azerbaijan, an oil-producing former Soviet republic that has cultivated close ties with Turkey and has been boosted by military victories over longtime rival Armenia since 2020. The dispute began when two ethnic Azerbaijani brothers died after being arrested last week during police raids as part of a murder investigation in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg. Russian authorities have said one of the men died of heart failure, but have not said how the other died. Azerbaijan says the pair were tortured and beaten to death. "It was emphasised that the explanation provided by the Russian side contradicts the clear signs of severe violence on the victims' bodies and the forensic reports," its foreign ministry said. Further fuelling the tensions, Azerbaijan this week arrested two Russian state journalists on fraud charges and about 15 other Russians on suspicion of drug trafficking and cybercrime. AZERBAIJANI PUSHBACK Zaur Shiriyev, non-resident scholar at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, said Azerbaijan was pushing back against Russia's "former hegemonic influence in the region", which had faded after Russia became distracted by its war in Ukraine. "At this point, Russia's loss of dominance in the South Caucasus seems hard to reverse. It still has power, but no longer sets the tone," he said in emailed comments. "Azerbaijan's more assertive actions are a response to this shift. And they don't fit with the kind of one-sided, top-down relationship Moscow is used to, like the one it has with Belarus," Shiriyev said. Azerbaijan's relations with Russia have been under strain since late last year, when 38 people were killed in the crash of an Azerbaijani airliner that Baku says was accidentally shot down by Russian air defences. Nemat Avazov, the head of Baku's investigation into the accident, told reporters on Wednesday that his team would release its findings in the coming days. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Moscow had been cultivating ties with Baku for many years based on mutual respect, but unknown actors were now trying to use the situation to "warm up their hands" - a Russian phrase meaning to enrich oneself. "Just don't let them get burned," she told Sputnik Radio in an interview. "Because for us, for the two peoples, friendship relations are extremely important. And those who want to spoil them should think carefully about what they are doing." REUTERS