Hapag-Lloyd to Halt Waste Shipments to China

June 26, 2020

© eyewave / Adobe Stock
© eyewave / Adobe Stock

German container shipping line Hapag-Lloyd said it had notified customers it will stop accepting cargoes of solid waste, including scrap metal, bound for China that arrive from September 1 onward to comply with new legislation.

China in April passed a law, taking effect in September, that holds carriers and importers responsible for the return and disposal of solid waste that fails to meet import requirements.

It plans a blanket ban on solid waste imports by end-2020 for environmental reasons.

"This legislation is applicable to all solid waste cargo such as waste paper, waste plastics, waste metals, waste chemicals etc," said a June 12 Hapag-Lloyd notice to customers, a copy of which a company spokesman provided in an email.

Any violation "will result in a customs-ordered return of shipment and possible fine may be imposed," it added.

Hapag-Lloyd is the latest shipping line to confirm it will stop accepting China-bound solid waste shipments after MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company said earlier this month it had instructed its shipping agents worldwide to reject such bookings.

Solid waste purchased under approved quotas can still enter China by the end of the year but the prompt action by shipping lines raises the prospect of disruption to supply in the latter months of 2020.


(Reporting by Vera Eckert in Frankfurt and Tom Daly in Beijing; editing by Barbara Lewis)

Logistics News

Somalia Ends Port Deals, Security Cooperation with UAE

Somalia Ends Port Deals, Security Cooperation with UAE

Supertankers Picking Up Venezuelan Oil for China Turn Around

Supertankers Picking Up Venezuelan Oil for China Turn Around

Maersk Successfully Navigates Red Sea Route as Gaza Ceasefire Holds

Maersk Successfully Navigates Red Sea Route as Gaza Ceasefire Holds

Spanish Police Seize 10 Tons of Cocaine in Salt Cargo

Spanish Police Seize 10 Tons of Cocaine in Salt Cargo

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Airbus jetliner deliveries rose 4% in 2025
US safety board will determine the cause of deadly Washington air crash that killed 67
Canadian National asks US regulator to provide more information on Union Pacific's Norfolk deal