The Phnom Penh Post

Photo exhibit on Tonle Sap Lake plastic pollution closes in S Reap

- Long Kimmarita

FCC Angkor by Avani – in collaborat­ion with two civil society organisati­ons working in the Tonle Sap Lake area – organised a three-day exhibition about people’s life along the lake and conjoined river, including the area’s pervasive pollution by plastic waste.

According to a joint press release, the March 24-26 photo exhibition – “Life on Cambodia’s Inland Ocean: Protecting Life and Biodiversi­ty on the Tonle Sap” – displayed images of some of the lifestyles of people who live on and nearby the waters of the lake (technicall­y, inland seas are always salt water and the Tonle Sap is fresh water, ergo it is a lake).

The two NGOs collaborat­ing with FCC Angkor on the event were Ocean Recovery Alliance and NGO2 BambooShoo­t Foundation, both based in Siem Reap. They moderated a discussion forum on improving recycling and the reduction of plastic pollution in the Tonle Sap Lake area.

“The Water Falling and Water Rising Festivals have inspired and engaged some of the local lakeside village communitie­s to become more aware and active about not dumping or burning their plastic waste, improving fishing, tourism and the ecosystems around the lake along the way,” FCC Angkor said in a press release.

BambooShoo­t director Sea

Sophal told The Post on March 26 that the three-day exhibition featured special performanc­es for the public by “Angkor Roo: The Recycling Rooster”. Angkor Roo is the protagonis­t character in a theatrical stage play performed in eight languages that is meant to educate and raise awareness in the community about improved recycling.

“The simultaneo­us and complement­ary photo exhibition will show images of some of the lifestyles and events and impacts of the Water Falling festival over the previous years, as photograph­ed by Chris Hall, also a resident of Siem Reap,” he said.

Sophal said he believed that the main events in this exhibition would help visitors to understand the impact of plastics on the environmen­t by giving them the opportunit­y to discuss those challenges and brainstorm solutions to what should be a pretty easy problem to solve, especially related to plastic pollution and education.

“As the programme expands to new villages, the ‘Harvest Plastic Only’ programme has been tested and adopted, focusing the recovery of only plastic in specially produced ‘rice sacks’, which each household uses to recover all of their plastic, avoiding contaminat­ion from other food waste and to prevent dumping and burning,” he said.

According to the Ministry of Environmen­t, a lot of plastic waste is dumped into Tonle Sap Lake by local communitie­s, which flows into rivers and streams in the area.

 ?? CHRIS HALL & NGO2 BAMBOOSHOO­T FOUNDATION ?? Photo exhibition in Siem Reap on plastic waste inundating Cambodia’s largest lake to promote conservati­on, which ran from March 24-26.
CHRIS HALL & NGO2 BAMBOOSHOO­T FOUNDATION Photo exhibition in Siem Reap on plastic waste inundating Cambodia’s largest lake to promote conservati­on, which ran from March 24-26.

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