When Nan Shunji brought a lot of toothpicks made in her hometown
to the annual session of China's top legislature, she meant to
promote a concept of environment- friendly consumption.
The toothpicks of the deputy to the National People's Congress
(NPC) are special not only in color, but also in raw material. They
were made of corn flour instead of bamboo or wood.
The lawmaker from Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture in
northeast China's Jilin Province, said she will share the new
product with her fellow deputies, hoping they can help bolster
environmental protection.
Following her call for a ban on disposable wood chopsticks at
NPC's annual session last year, she is focusing on wood toothpicks
this time, Nan said.
"We have wasted a lot of natural resources at our dinner
tables," Nan, board chairwoman of a local paper mill, said.
The deputy said that 1.6 million cubic meters of wood and 1.4
million tons of bamboo are used each year to make toothpicks in
China.
A ban on wood and bamboo toothpicks, she said, can not only save
natural resources, but also help curb pollution, as the bleaching
procedure in making wood or bamboo toothpicks inevitably produces
pollutants.
Corn flour can avoid such pollution, she said.
A survey showed that in China, 66.5 percent of adults use
toothpicks after meal, and the country consumes about 200 billion
toothpicks a year.
Toothpicks made of corn flour are "edible", and used ones can
either be saved for feedstuff or buried in soil, which are easily
degradable, she said.
The producer of the organic toothpicks will also develop
environment-friendly disposable cups, food boxes and chopsticks
with corn flour, according to Nan.
Jilin is one of China's major corn producers.
Under the context of China's drive to build a resources-saving
society, experts believe, the organic industry can enjoy a
favorable growth environment.
The Fourth Session of the Tenth National People's Congress is to
open Sunday in Beijing.
(Xinhua News Agency March 4, 2006)