Trash bins make techy comeback in Japan as tourists flood cities

Over 200 smart trash cans can be found across other major tourist hot spots, including the Arashiyama bamboo forests of Kyoto. PHOTO: SMAGO.JP

TOKYO - Japan has long managed to keep its streets spotless despite having no litter bins in sight, but cities are now turning to “smart” bins as tourist numbers – and the amount of garbage – surge. 

This week, the tourist-heavy Dotonbori district in Osaka installed around 20 new technologically enabled rubbish bins called SmaGO.

The solar-powered bin automatically senses when it is getting full and then compresses the garbage by about 20 per cent.

It is also connected to a smartphone app that analyses data on garbage volume and sends alerts to workers before it fills up.

“Some local governments are finally starting to realise that there is little else you can do other than provide trash bins,” said Mr Yohei Takemura, chief executive officer of start-up Forcetec, which distributes the SmaGO in Japan.

“There are also more people saying that they would like to experiment with garbage bins to see if it will make their cities cleaner.”

Following the 1995 poison gas terrorist attack by the Aum Shinrikyo cult in Tokyo, waste receptacles disappeared from many public spaces in Japan, though they can now be found in heavy traffic areas like major train stations.

Ms Maiko Kimura, town beautification manager of the Environment Bureau of Osaka, said the city completely removed them as a way to deal with overflowing garbage and resulting complaints from citizens.

But with the number of inbound tourists officially surpassing pre-pandemic levels in October, rubbish is becoming more common on Japanese streets.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida launched a policy package on overtourism in October that even includes a subsidy for smart trash bins, in addition to other measures such as promoting lesser-known destinations for tourism.

The problem is compounded by the fact that Japan offers many different kinds of street food such as fried octopus balls or fish-shaped cakes filled with red bean paste, and tourists who buy them are often not cognisant of Japan’s strict rules around sorting trash at home and do not want to carry trash around with them.

“For Japanese people, it’s always been normal to carry around their trash in their bag to throw it out when they get home,” said Mr Takemura, a surfer who started Forcetec after noticing how much waste there was in the sea. 

The company imports the bins from Massachusetts-based waste management company Bigbelly, which first introduced them in Colorado almost two decades ago.

In Manhattan, Wi-Fi-enabled Bigbelly bins were tested in 2015.

Mr Takemura said that there was initial reluctance to use them in Japan, and that it was a “big deal” to finally convince Tokyo’s Omotesando shopping street to install them in 2020.

More than 200 smart rubbish bins can be found across other major tourist hot spots, including the Arashiyama bamboo forests of Kyoto.

With the number of inbound tourists officially surpassing pre-pandemic levels in October, trash is becoming more common on Japanese city streets. PHOTO: AFP

SmaGOs have instructions written on them in multiple languages catering to foreign tourists, and are sometimes funded by sponsorships to lessen the burden on municipalities.

For example, in Hiroshima, bins sponsored by snack maker Calbee are decorated with the city’s ocean landscape and shrimps from the brand’s signature shrimp chips.

Other Asian cities, such as Taipei and Seoul, have also removed rubbish cans from streets as a way to keep the roads clean. The South Korean capital recently announced that it will add thousands more bins over the next few years as trash, such as takeout cups, starts to pile up on streets. 

Mr Fumitake Takahashi, a Tokyo Institute of Technology associate professor who specialises in environmental social science and also studies recycling behaviour using data from SmaGOs, used the broken window theory to explain how having poorly managed trash cans in streets encourages more people to just add their trash to an already overflowing pile.

“Separating garbage is simply a hassle,” he said.

“But maybe the power of design can help us overcome that hassle, so we must research what the best design would be and what the best location is for these trash cans.”

Emellience Partners, the venture capital arm of Japanese technology company Biprogy, sees smart trash cans as a growing industry in Japan.

It has invested about ¥300 million (S$2.7 million) into Forcetec.

“We see great potential in this solution,” said Mr Shinsuke Chiba, CEO of Emellience Partners.

“Since the partnership, we are getting almost twice as many inquiries from local governments.”

Still, there remains opposition to trash cans by some local governments including in Osaka itself.

The SmaGOs placed in Dotonbori are actually being paid for and maintained by the shopping district with a subsidy from the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.

Osaka’s Ms Kimura said that the city does not have any plans to add smart rubbish cans in the near future. 

“Having the trash cans on the street actually made the city dirtier because people would bring their food waste from home, and it would overflow and make the area smell,” she said.

“I hope that tourists will have the manners to take their trash home or return it to the stores that they bought the food from,” she added. BLOOMBERG

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