Post Magazine

Cafe de Coral, Fairwood and Maxim's use 180 million pieces of disposable plastic a year in Hong Kong, Greenpeace study finds

Three Hong Kong fast-food giants between them used 180 million items of disposable plastic for both eat-in and takeaway meals last year, according to a green group.

Cafe de Coral, Fairwood and Maxim's provided seven to 14 pieces of plastic per takeaway meal, adding up to about 100 million disposable items a year, a Greenpeace study released on Thursday said.

The annual volume of waste created by these three chains alone could cover the distance between Hong Kong and Tokyo nearly 10 times if the items were placed end to end, the group said. This did not take into account plastic waste generated by people dining elsewhere.

All three chains joined a HK$1.2 million (US$153,000) government-funded incentive scheme, which started on November 15 and ends in January, in which customers who opt not to use plastic utensils can receive stamps to redeem a free set of reusable cutlery or a hot drink.

But Greenpeace questioned the effectiveness of the scheme.

"A takeaway meal from a fast-food shop uses seven to 14 pieces of plastic on average, it's the main culprit for plastic pollution in Hong Kong," said Greenpeace campaigner Chan Hall-sion.

According to 2016 statistics " the most recent available " municipal solid waste, or refuse generated from households as well as commercial and industrial sources, accounted for 67 per cent of what went into the city's landfills. Of this, 35 per cent was food waste, paper 22 per cent, and plastics 21 per cent.

From 2005 to 2015, the proportion of utensils in plastic waste rose 3 percentage points to 8 per cent, and plastic waste at landfills increased by a quarter, according to lawmaker Gary Chan Hak-kan.

Greenpeace started a campaign two months ago to get local restaurants to reduce plastic waste for takeaway items. More than 200 food shops across Hong Kong joined and some restaurants offered customers discounts of up to HK$10 to encourage them to use less disposable tableware, Chan Hall-sion said.

"Fast-food shops can transfer the HK$2.40 plastic cost as a discount for customers who are willing to bring their own reusable utensils. It's a win-win situation which promotes the use of reusable cutlery among citizens," Chan said, adding that the government could do more on reducing the use of single-use utensils in the catering industry.

But catering sector lawmaker Tommy Cheung Yu-yan said the blame should not entirely be shifted onto fast-food chains.

"Hong Kong citizens should take responsibility to reduce plastic waste by using their own reusable tableware," he said.

In response to inquiries from the Post, a spokesman for Fairwood said customers who dined in were only provided with reusable tableware, except at two takeaway stores at the Sun Hung Kai Centre in Wai Chai and Kowloon Station.

A spokesman for Maxim's said the company's takeaway utensils were made from recycled plastic. It also planned to replace the supply of stirrers for hot drinks with non-plastic materials.

Cafe de Coral did not reply to the Post's inquiries.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2018. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from Post Magazine

Post Magazine3 min read
US Should Reform Existing China Tariffs To Target Technology Transfers, Congressional Panel Hears
Washington should reform existing tariffs to target Chinese technology-related transfers, an American economist told a congressional panel on Thursday. The US should remove import taxes that offer no strategic value and to ease a burden felt by worki
Post Magazine2 min read
Passers-by Help To Subdue Knifeman At Fast-food Outlet In Hong Kong Mall Using Trolleys, Ladder For Protection
Passers-by and staff using trolleys and a ladder helped to subdue a knifeman who wounded a cashier at a fast-food outlet in a Hong Kong shopping centre, with five people, including the suspect, hurt after a scuffle. Police were called in at about 7pm
Post Magazine3 min readWorld
China And Argentina In Early Talks Over Javier Milei's Possible Visit To Beijing: Sources
Argentina and China are in early talks over a potential visit by President Javier Milei to Beijing, although neither a date nor an agenda has been finalised, sources familiar with the matter told the South China Morning Post on Friday. The news comes

Related Books & Audiobooks