“Burns” meaning present tense? They were shipping a lot of their plastic waste to Asia. Most countries are guilty of burning waste, but more to the point, is what current initiatives are being put into practice by countries. Which countries are making the real effort - clearly we see from that video that Germany is putting that effort in. Yes, certainly it is not across the whole country, but instead of dwelling on the negative, it is about celebrating the positive change that is being initiated.
No matter what the change, it takes from months to years to happen. The point is if the change has started to show, we should be celebrating that, and encouraging others (and within that same country) to do the same.
“Never” is never the best choice of word to use… It may just mean that many are doing it incorrectly, or in name only.
Germany, for example, seems to be taking it more seriously - see https://youtu.be/I_fUpP-hq3A
Germany burns a lot of their plastic.
“Burns” meaning present tense? They were shipping a lot of their plastic waste to Asia. Most countries are guilty of burning waste, but more to the point, is what current initiatives are being put into practice by countries. Which countries are making the real effort - clearly we see from that video that Germany is putting that effort in. Yes, certainly it is not across the whole country, but instead of dwelling on the negative, it is about celebrating the positive change that is being initiated.
No matter what the change, it takes from months to years to happen. The point is if the change has started to show, we should be celebrating that, and encouraging others (and within that same country) to do the same.
‘Burns’ as in present tense, since energy production from waste incineration counts as recycling in Germany.
how much of their recycling actually utilizes this burning? in terms of mass of plastic
This article says the recycling quota is 70% but only 16% go to the production of new products, the rest is being exported or burned. The study they linked says that for plastics 54% are converted into energy, which is basically the same statement phrased a bit differently.