What a waste: Hong Kong government 'set to miss targets' as people dump more rubbish

Green groups fear government waste reduction targets for 2022 could be heading for the bin as new data once again reveals more rubbish was dumped in the city's landfills last year.
An average of 14,859 tonnes of solid waste was discarded every day last year, an increase of 3.8 per cent from 2013. It was largely driven by a 10 per cent rise in construction waste, the latest Environmental Protection Department statistics show. The 2013 rise was 3.4 per cent.
The department said the figure had "fallen cumulatively" by 9 per cent over the past decade.
The amount of municipal solid waste dumped in landfills increased 2.5 per cent from an average of 9,547 tonnes per day in 2013 to 9,782 tonnes last year.
Municipal solid waste, which is general rubbish from the domestic, commercial and industrial sectors - roughly a third of which is food waste - is the biggest component in the city's rubbish mix, followed by construction and demolition waste.
This means that on average a person generated 1.35kg of rubbish a day last year compared with 1.33kg in 2013, 1.3kg in 2012 and 1.27kg in 2011.