Hong Kong’s only drinks carton recycler may halt collections on Sat amid dispute


Hong Kong’s only drinks carton recycler will have to halt collections from Saturday unless its government-backed landlord budges on its decision not to renew their lease, Mil Mill’s co-founder has said.

Speaking to the press on Tuesday, Harold Yip denied the Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation (HKSTP)’s claim that both parties had only agreed a short-term lease in 2018 for the Yuen Long Industrial Estate venue.

Harold Yip, co-founder of Mil Mill, on September 27. Photo: Lea Mok/HKFP

“[I]f the agreement was only three years all along, we would not have invested 10 million [dollars] in the first place,” Yip said, in reference to the factory start-up costs.

“We’re just a small and medium-sized enterprise. The HKSTP might have a huge PR team working for them, but I stopped my other duties just to deal with this. We have a lot more to work on if we really plan to expand our business to Singapore,” Yip said, adding that he was not interested in meeting with the HKSTP anymore, and that a university professor from Singapore has invited Mil Mill to start a new project there.

If Mil Mill were to close, Yip said there would be a “vacuum” in Hong Kong’s drinks carton recycling industry, adding that it may be difficult for people to rekindle the carton recycling habit.

Yet, the recycling entrepreneur said they would not give up: “[W]e see the recycling business in Hong Kong as our vocation.”

With the city’s landfills nearing capacity, the government has set a target to gradually reduce per capita municipal solid waste by 40-45 per cent, and raise the recovery rate to around 55 per cent by encouraging recycling and charging for disposal.

The lease

Albert Wong, the Chief Executive Officer of HKSTP, told the press on Tuesday that they have been “working hard to help” Secure Information Disposal Services Limited (SSID), Mil Mill’s parent firm, from the beginning.

Wong said they had made it clear with the recycle firm that the initial lease was set to expire in three years by the end of 2021 and the HKSTP had reminded their tenant in mid-2020.

Harold Yip, co-founder of Mil Mill, on September 27. Photo: Lea Mok/HKFP

Mil Mill had said in a previous statement that its two co-founders understood the landlord would allow them to operate for at least six years when they rented the site in 2018.

But Wong said he had confirmed with HKSTP’s existing staff that they never made such an offer: “During business planning, they should have clearly worked out [what they can do] within three years,” Wong added.

Harold Yip, co-founder of Mil Mill, on September 27. Photo: Lea Mok/HKFP

After learning about the paper pulp mill’s relocation difficulties, Wong said they granted a request for a year-long lease extension late last year: “It is not the case that we are evicting them as soon as the lease expires.”

When asked why the recycling plant must relocate so soon and how it may obstruct industrial projects nearby, the Head of Re-industrialisation at HKSTP Yiu Hing-leung told reporters that “whenever a short-term lease is used, it means…



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