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China trash town's cleanup bolstered by import ban

* China's foreign waste ban forcing recyclers to upgrade

* Government struggling to cope with soaring domestic waste

* Smugglers of foreign waste targeted by authorities

By David Stanway

GUIYU, China, Jan 24 (Reuters) - The dizzying stench of burning plastic still drifts through the alleys, workshops and warehouses of Guiyu, the southern Chinese town that has long symbolised China's role as the main recycler of the world's waste.

But residents say the air isn't half as noxious as it was five years ago, when authorities launched a drive to industrialise the town's recycling operations – and address the chronic health problems that came from dismantling things like old computers and mobile phones by hand.

The acrid black smoke that once billowed from the backstreets has gone, and the rivers that wind their way through the town of about 100,000 people, though still cluttered with trash, are much cleaner, residents say.

Now, the residents of Guiyu – located in the economic powerhouse province of Guangdong, about 175 miles from Hong Kong – are grappling with a new cleanup of the recycling industry that remains a mainstay of the town's economy.

In an effort to deal with its fast-growing domestic waste problem, the Chinese government has blocked all imports of 24 types of foreign trash.

The ban, which took effect on Jan 1, has left countries like Britain and the United States reeling, with few alternative destinations for mountains of old mobile phones, paper, textiles and plastics once treated in backyard operations along China's eastern coast.

It has also forced recycling centres like Guiyu to step up their efforts to transform informal, backstreet industries into fully regulated, more technologically advanced and environmentally friendly ones.

The effort in Guiyu also underlines the ability of the Chinese government to address the country's chronic pollution issues when it has the political will - and offers the right incentives - to do so.

While residents in Guiyu generally welcome the cleaner environment, the ban on foreign waste - which is usually better sorted than domestic trash and therefore more lucrative to handle - has been a damaging blow for many recyclers.

The boss of one recycling facility, who requested anonymity, said she was "close to bankruptcy".

"We don't have any foreign trash any more," she said. "The ban has made it harder to make money."

These backyard facilities still receive local trash, but are mostly limited to handling lower-end plastics. Higher-end electronic and metal waste is limited to those companies that move into a new recycling park set up by the local government that has facilities to deal with the pollution risks.