By Prak Chan Thul
PHNOM PENH, July 19 (Reuters) - Cambodia is investigating a
locally based Chinese firm for illegally importing around 1,600
tonnes of plastic waste from the United States and Canada, the
Southeast Asian country's customs chief told Reuters on Friday.
Southeast Asian nations have emerged as some of the top
destinations for plastic waste exporters in the West after China
introduced a partial ban on waste imports in 2018 which
disrupted the flow of more than 7 million tonnes of plastic
scrap a year.
Kun Nhim, director general of Cambodia's General Department
of Customs and Excise, told Reuters that a Chinese firm based in
Cambodia had imported the waste, which was discovered this week
in 83 shipping containers at the Sihanoukville Autonomous Port.
"There will obviously be fines, although how much will
depend on our law, and the company may face termination if it is
found to have committed a crime," Nhim told Reuters.
He identified the company as "Chingyuen", but Reuters was
unable to trace a company of that name.
On Wednesday, Cambodian authorities said that they would
send the waste back to its stated countries of origin - the
United States and Canada.
The U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh said it was aware of the
reports.
"We have requested additional information and are offering
U.S. government assistance to determine both the exporter
(country of origin) and the importing entity here in Cambodia,"
Embassy spokeswoman Emily Zeeberg told Reuters.
The Embassy of Canada in Phnom Penh did not immediately
respond to request from Reuters for comment.
The containers had been arriving over a period since October
2018, Nhim said.
They had been mislabelled as "recycled products", according
to Neth Pheaktra, Secretary of State at Cambodia's Ministry of
Environment.
"The Royal Government of Cambodia does not allow the import
of plastic waste to be recycled in Cambodia," Pheaktra said.
"Cambodia is not a waste bin".
A ship carrying 69 containers of waste mislabelled as
plastic returned to Canada last month from the Philippines,
closing a chapter on a dispute that started in 2013 and sparked
a diplomatic furore between Ottawa and Manila. (
Editing by James Pearson and Nick Macfie)