Thailand’s recent seizure of suspected illegal e-waste at Laem Chabang Port is the latest in a wave of enforcement actions across Southeast Asia that is reshaping how the region handles foreign electronic scrap, and raising the prospect that exporters face a National Sword-style closure of informal import channels.
With Malaysia running parallel crackdowns and corruption probes at Port Klang and Indonesia still working to re-export hundreds of containers of U.S.-origin e-waste from Batam, the Thai case is shaping up as a critical test of how the Basel Convention’s return-to-sender provisions will be applied in practice. Thai officials say a major portion of the load, declared as metal scrap but found to contain significant volumes of end-of-life electronics, will be sent back to the United States.
Thai customs and environmental authorities have described three main groups of containers opened during an inspection operation presented to the public on March 10. The first group consists of 12 containers holding about 284 tons of material, declared on customs documents as “scrap iron” originating from Haiti. Officials say those containers actually contained electronic scrap, including circuit boards, computer components and other e-waste that falls under Thailand’s import prohibitions. Two additional groups included four containers declared as “metal scraps” and “mixed metal” from the United States, reportedly destined for Japan and Hong Kong, and two containers declared as “aluminum scraps” from the United States and the Netherlands.
Authorities have indicated that the March 10 enforcement action is part of a broader crackdown. The operation follows a separate seizure of 21 containers in February, 12 of which were found to contain electronic waste. On March 10, officials physically opened and examined 18 containers in the three groups described above. Thai media report that the Customs Department is preparing legal action under Section 244 of the Customs Act 2017, which carries penalties of up to 10 years’ imprisonment or a fine of up to 500,000 baht, and that authorities will also impose a settlement fine equivalent to 20 percent of the declared value.
Thai officials say the 12 containers declared as scrap iron from Haiti, and found to contain about 284 tons of e-scrap, will be returned to the United States. Thai authorities have stated that, in their view, the electronic waste in those containers originated in the U.S., even though the documentation listed Haiti as the origin. The discovery was reportedly made following a tip-off from the Basel Action Network (BAN), an environmental watchdog that monitors trafficking in hazardous goods in violation of the Basel Convention. Thai authorities have linked their decision to repatriate the waste to the Basel Convention’s provisions on illegal traffic, which assign responsibility to the state of export or origin to take back waste shipments that are misdeclared or moved without proper consent.
Thailand is a Party to the Basel Convention, having ratified it in March 2023, and officials have framed this case as an example of applying Basel’s “return to state of export” mechanism to e-waste that reaches Thai ports in violation of national rules. The United States has not ratified Basel, but the convention’s procedures still allow a party such as Thailand to insist that a shipment it deems illegal be repatriated to the identified state of export. Thai authorities have not, at this stage, publicly named the U.S. exporter or broker they believe is behind the Haiti-declared containers.
The enforcement action builds on several years of regulatory tightening that have progressively closed Thailand’s doors to imported electronic waste. The government first moved in September 2020 to prohibit imports of e-waste across 428 categories, then expanded that list to 463 items in June 2025, adding more types of end-of-life electronics and aligning tariff codes with the 2022 Harmonized System. Against that backdrop, the Laem Chabang case signals that shipping non-repairable electronics into Thailand under commodity scrap labels carries a growing risk that containers will be opened, reclassified as illegal traffic and ordered back to the sender.
Thailand’s action at Laem Chabang is not happening in isolation. Malaysia is running its own crackdown at Port Klang, where authorities have seized hundreds of tons of misdeclared e-waste in recent weeks while anti-corruption investigators have arrested senior officials at the Department of Environment over alleged facilitation of the trade. Indonesia, meanwhile, is still working to re-export 914 containers of U.S.-origin e-waste from Batam.
These developments increasingly resemble the early stages of what China’s National Sword policy did to mixed recyclables in 2018: a region-wide closure of informal import channels that forces exporters to find compliant domestic outlets or face escalating legal and financial consequences.