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Home Reports Special Report The plastic solution

The plastic solution

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The smart, sensible and economic way to deal with buveera

 

Lubwama Isma crosses the road at city square with a sack of plastic bottles hanging over his shoulder. He looks around in all directions and puts his sack down to pick a few more plastic bottles before continuing towards Nakawa where he sells the scrap. As he rummages through garbage piles for plastic bottles, people routinely mistake him for a scavenger. “They at times hull insults at me but I just do my job,” he says. Lubwama, 39, started the business in 2008, and can earn up to Shs 5,000 a day—a salary that has enabled him to send his children to school and buy himself a bicycle.

 

But his work, despite being unappreciated by the public, is actually compensating for their ignorance and laziness.  Approximately 600 tonnes of plastic are disposed of in Kampala everyday, of which the vast majority litter the grounds and clog vital sewage systems. People like Isma are not the problem—they are part of the solution.

Alex Byarugaba, project manager of Plastic Recycling Industries (PRI), one of 16 Kampala-centric factories that have ventured into the recycling industry, says his company recycles 15 tonnes of plastic waste a day. PRI pays Shs 200-400 for every kilogramme of plastic and recycles it into raw material for plastic companies in Uganda and in countries such as China and Malawi. The recycled plastic is then used to manufacture polythene bags, plastic pipes and other plastics.

 

PRI is supplied plastic waste primarily through schools, hospitals and hotels. However, many schools and hospitals do not know about recycling and even those that do end up mixing the plastics with garbage. According to Byarugaba, the recycling industry is capable of earning Shs 15 billion a month, but as a result of this public unawareness or disregard, the industry generates just five percent of this potential.

The government’s attitude, explains Andrew Kyazze Kaggwa, the Policy Officer, Uganda Manufacturers Association, has also been counterproductive. “We appealed to government to give recycling industries some incentives in the form of tax waivers, cheaper electricity tariffs and so on but they just want to ban Buveera everytime,”

Paul Muwanga, Managing Director of Luuka Plastics, a company that recycles 30 tonnes of plastic per month, says he is tired of the government’s arguments. “We are tired of explaining to government the benefits of recycling because they are not listening.”

Muwanga’s despair is not without reason. Finance minister, Syda Bbumba recently tabled a proposal in the 2010/11 budget to fine any Kaveera (plastic bag) dealer Shs 14 million. This is not the first time government is coming out to ban the plastic bags; in the 2009/10 budget vowed to punish the manufacture, use and importation of plastic bags, second hand refrigerators and computers. The ban was highly contested by traders and manufacturers and ultimately was not implemented.

A second challenge to the recycling industry stems from a general attitude of apathy from the public. “We intend to push for higher prices for a kilo of plastic so that people can be interested in collection,” says Kaggwa, “but the people are not interested in the collection idea at all. Everyone dumps plastic bottles, bags everywhere and they are not bothered at all.”

A 2004 National Environment Authority report, stated that 51% of garbage is left uncollected thereby ending up dumped in drainage and sanitary drainage channels, natural water courses, manholes, underdeveloped plots and roadsides among other unfit places (NEMA, 2004). In most slum areas, people just wait for nightfall and dump their waste, especially polythene bags and other plastic waste anyhow which clogs drainage channels like Nakivubo and sewerage systems.

Alice Nayebare, a resident of Katanga admits that she has dumped gabbage containing polythene bags and other plastics in the middle of the road or in trenches which are part of the drainage system. She admits that she is not aware that it affects the environment because for her she thinks it somehow finds its way in its place.

“I at times wake up very early and dump the garbage in the middle of the roads. There, I do not have to pay for it and cars normally step on it and somehow it disappears,” she says. “But in rainy seasons I always dump it in trenches and it gets carried away.”

Although this out of sight out of mind mentality might work for Nayebare, it doesn’t work for the environment. Gideon Badagamawa, an expert on environment and natural resources, explains that plastic is non biodegradable and therefore takes thousands of years to disintegrate into even small particles there by affecting soils.

“Over 50% imports of food come to Africa not because we cannot produce food but because our soils have degenerated partly because they are chocked with such dangerous substances,” Badagamawa says. “But plastic does not only stop at that. When it is burnt it emits pollutants like carbon dioxide that destroy the ozone layer. Skin cancer cases have increased because with a destroyed ozone layer we are exposed to ultra violet rays.”

Badagamawa adds that well managed recycling programs can reduce pollution and the use of virgin resources, while also decreasing the amount of garbage and the need for landfill space.

However, in poor countries like Uganda reducing plastic usage is not an easy task. For instance, Uganda manufactures warned that banning plastics, which are largely used for packaging, would increase costs of production and thus prices of consumer goods.

There is still hope in the recycling industry that if the government does not ban plastics, the industry can develop. Uganda Plastic Manufacturers and Recycling Association intend to continue to lobby the government for support and institutions like the National Environment Management Agency to help sensitise the public.

As of now that help has not been forthcoming. 

 

Comments (5)Add Comment
...
written by Major Adam Kifaliso, September 03, 2010
the taxes levied on Kavera industry must be used to elect a mordern recycling industry and infrastructure in Uganda , plastics are very much in our daily life and everywhere , blood bottles , wrapps and even in construction ,so solution is management and not banning , recycling can be 100,000 job industry
Mama Saidha Bumba must show that she is upto her job and not a clown in which m7 hides
Director Murubya Primary School Hoima
written by Moses Asiimwe Byangire, September 06, 2010
Am one of those persons who have always wondered the view of the minister, that kaveera as it is commonly referred to be banned or the people found with it be given heavy fines of up to 14 millions. one does wonder whether such is a workable solution. I do believe our policy makers do travel frequently to many countries unlike the saying of the child who always thinks the mother cooks bests.
I traveled to one the developed countries in Europe and found that; surely Kaveera is very much used for everyday use right from packaging to construction. The only difference with us here is that we have a disposal indiscipline in our country here.I would recommend that our people should be sensitised on the best methods of disposal and collection then recycling instead of a ban. thank you
replica watches
written by replica chanel, September 16, 2010


You will never ever regret to enter and take a look at.
Plastics can't be done away with.
written by Grace Nanyonga, December 17, 2010
Plastics can never be done away with because we use them so much in our everyday life. For instance during shopping and 80% of the household items are plastic. The best we can do is to recycle them. We can also have plastic collecting centres where we can drop off our plastics, kaveeras or polythene bags for recycling.
Industrial Packaging
written by Stephen Miller, February 01, 2012
We're pretty automated in our packaging industry here in Ireland but it's interesting to see what's happening in other countries around the world and particularly what opportunities there will be for companies such as ours to supply products to rapidly expanding industries abroad. Industrial packaging systems have the ability to cut packaging - and hence environmental pollution - down by up to 75%. Plastics in particular are ideal for 'stretch wrapping', maintaining strength while minimising unnecessary waste.

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