Is Hong Kong doing enough to limit plastic pollution? Supermarkets and other food vendors are slow to reduce single-use plastic use, and alternatives can’t compete
- Most of the plastic rubbish that turns up or washes up on Hong Kong beaches ‘is what you can usually find in the supermarket’, a clean-up volunteer says
- The coronavirus pandemic spurred use of single-use plastics, and while some businesses have acted, only small steps towards banning them have been taken
![June Wong So-kwan picks up plastic waste on Hong Kong’s beaches, but is the city doing enough to reduce the amount of plastic that washes into the ocean? Photo: Jonathan Wong](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2021/09/28/aadee00b-cb45-4439-8fc1-77e16ee04f73_096b73df.jpg?itok=GvzBUfTs&v=1632818503)
June Wong So-kwan picks up plastic takeaway cups and boxes, bottles, wrappers and containers on her regular rubbish collection trips to Hong Kong’s beaches.
“When I do beach clean-ups in Hong Kong, I find a lot of these kinds of wrappers, the prepack containers,” she says. “This is what you can usually find in the supermarket. I think it’s a very big issue.”
One of many volunteers who patrol the coast in their spare time, the manager for marine pollution at WWF-HK collects the trash in an attempt to keep the city’s beaches clean and to prevent plastic rubbish from floating out to sea. It’s a never-ending task.
![Wong collects rubbish from a beach near WWF Island House in Tai Po, in Hong Kong’s New Territories. Photo: Jonathan Wong Wong collects rubbish from a beach near WWF Island House in Tai Po, in Hong Kong’s New Territories. Photo: Jonathan Wong](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2021/09/28/5cff6fd7-ae87-4a4d-a0ae-27b7fe3020e2_798e21ed.jpg)
Some of the plastic seems entirely redundant: toilet rolls are individually wrapped and sold with other rolls in a larger bag, boxes of canned drinks are wrapped in plastic, and vegetables and fruit are packaged in boxes or bags.
![loading](https://assets-v2.i-scmp.com/production/_next/static/media/wheel-on-gray.af4a55f9.gif)