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Plastic bags from Walmart US recycling bins tracked to controversial plastic


Pua Lay Peng lives on the front lines of the global plastic pollution crisis. The 52-year-old’s hometown of Jenjarom, Malaysia has been transformed in recent years by thousands of tons of imported plastic waste from the U.S. and other wealthy nations. As a result, the once quiet agricultural town she grew up in is now surrounded by dumpsites and smokestacks from plastic factories that she says pose dire health risks for her and her loved ones.

“We want to let people who send their waste to Malaysia know that we need your help,” she told ABC News. “Your waste is harmful and threatens the health of my family, my children, and also destroys the future of my people, my generation.”

PHOTO: Malaysian anti-plastics advocate Pua Lay Peng searching through a burning dumpsite outside a plastic facility near her hometown of Jenjarom, Malaysia.

Malaysian anti-plastics advocate Pua Lay Peng searching through a burning dumpsite outside a plastic facility near her hometown of Jenjarom, Malaysia.

ABC News

Hidden among the tsunami of plastic waste America sent to Southeast Asia last year were three of the 19 tracking devices ABC News secured to plastic bags and dropped off at Walmart store recycling bins across the U.S. Two of those trackers ended up at plastic facilities outside of Port Klang, Malaysia, not far from Pua Lay Peng’s hometown, while a third landed in Indonesia.

PHOTO: The last known locations in Southeast Asia where three plastic bag trackers that ABC News deployed in recycling bins at U.S. Walmarts.

The last known locations in Southeast Asia where three plastic bag trackers that ABC News deployed in recycling bins at U.S. Walmarts.

ABC News

“No responsible waste company in the United States, no responsible local government should be exporting plastic waste to other countries,” Judith Enck, a former Environmental Protection Agency administrator and current president of the anti-plastic pollution project Beyond Plastics, told ABC News. “It’s causing real damage, particularly in Indonesia and Malaysia,” Enck said.

Probing the international plastic waste trade

Originally deployed as part of a groundbreaking investigation into America’s plastic recycling system, these three trackers now offer a rare glimpse into the mysterious and controversial inner workings of the international plastic waste trade.

The investigation began more than 18 months ago, when ABC News and nine of its affiliated and owned stations secured 46 digital tracking devices to plastic bags and deployed them at Walmart and Target store drop-off recycling bins across 10 states. ABC News closely monitored the trackers for months and checked each facility they pinged from to ensure that the trackers likely had not been detected as contamination along their journey. Ultimately, the vast majority of trackers never pinged from a plastic bag recycling facility, with many ending up in landfills or incinerators.

Only four trackers last pinged from a U.S. facility that said it was involved in plastic bag recycling. However, subsequent public records requests and additional research have revealed that all four of these facilities likely either trashed the plastic bags in the U.S. or exported them abroad, though none of the facilities would divulge to ABC News specifically where the bags were sent.

PHOTO: A burning dumpsite located directly beside a plastic manufacturing facility outside Jenjarom, Malaysia.

A burning dumpsite located directly beside a plastic manufacturing facility outside Jenjarom, Malaysia.

ABC News

Exporting plastic waste, particularly to poorer nations, is a controversial practice. Often decried by critics as “waste colonialism,” the United Nations has described it as “highly prone to corruption,” and the international community has tried to curb the trade through the 2019 Basel Convention’s Amendments on Plastic Waste, which set strict regulations for international plastic waste shipments.

The U.S, however, one of the world’s biggest plastic producers, is among five U.N.-recognized countries that refused to join the agreement and which continues to send plastic waste abroad with little oversight. Since 2020, more than 600,000 metric tons of plastic waste has been shipped from U.S. ports to countries around the world under the premise of “recycling,” according to an ABC News analysis of data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence.

A plastic bag’s journey from New York to Indonesia

The first ABC News plastic bag tracker to travel overseas was dropped into a plastic bag recycling bin at a Walmart in Kingston, New York. It later pinged from a recycling facility in New Jersey known to export plastic waste abroad. The tracker then went dark for nearly three months, until it finally pinged more than 9,000 miles away, directly outside three affiliated plastic facilities in Batam, Indonesia. After that, it was never heard from again.

PHOTO: The locations of a plastic bag tracker deployed by ABC News at a Walmart in Kingston, New York, until the tracker’s final known location, which pinged inside an industrial park that houses three affiliated plastic facilities in Batam, Indonesia.

The locations of a plastic bag tracker deployed by ABC News at a Walmart in Kingston, New York over the course over several months until the tracker’s final known location, which pinged inside an industrial park that houses three affiliated plastic facilities in Batam, Indonesia.

ABC News

The plastic facilities near the location of…



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