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Data InsightsThe global trade of plastic waste has fallen dramatically in the last decade

The global trade of plastic waste has fallen dramatically in the last decade

Global plastic trade has fallen dramatically, mostly due to China’s ban on imports

Line chart, 1992 to 2021, showing tonnes of plastic imports on the vertical axis from 0 to 16 million t. Two series are plotted: total plastics imported across all countries and China’s imports. Key insight: total global imports rise from near zero in the 1990s to a peak around 2015 to 2016 of about 16 million tonnes, then collapse steeply to roughly 4 million tonnes by 2021 — a fall of more than two-thirds. China’s imports climb to about 8 million tonnes in the mid 2010s, then drop sharply to near zero after policy changes and stop completely in 2021. Annotations note China reduced plastic imports in 2016 and banned imports of plastic waste in 2018 with a complete end to imports in 2021. Data source: United Nations Comtrade Database (2025).

It might seem odd that countries would agree to import plastic waste from other countries, but many do so for the cheap materials or to feed specific manufacturing processes.

Environmentally, the trade in plastics has often been a concern, as it allows rich countries to effectively “dump” waste on poorer countries with weaker waste management systems.

The good news is that trade in plastic waste has fallen by more than two-thirds over the last decade. You can see this reduction in the chart.

China has been the biggest driver of this. It was once a large importer, but after a steep decline in trade in 2016 and a ban in 2018, many countries lost their largest export market.

In 2024, around 5 million tonnes of plastic waste were traded worldwide. For context, that is around 1% of the total plastic waste generated. What’s perhaps surprising is that most trade is now between high-income countries, which reduces the risk that this waste leaks into the environment.

Learn more in our updated topic page on plastic pollution.

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