Times Colonist

Africa’s solid waste poses a climate threat

- TOM ODULA

NAIROBI, Kenya — No one would envy a life of scavenging in Kenya’s biggest landfill, but Daniel Kiarie says he would never leave it.

Birds circle overhead and dogs scuffle as the 35-year-old moves through the filth of Nairobi, intent on useful finds. Ground-up garbage, from used hospital needles to battered toys, crunches under his feet. Thirty pungent acres stretch out before him at the centre of the city’s poorest slums.

“This is like any other job,” Kiarie said. “I would not leave it for a cosy office.” In blue overalls, he oversees a hill of plastics he has salvaged to sell to recycling companies. “And I am not mad.”

As the world meets again to tackle the growing threat of climate change, Africa expects to suffer the most from rising temperatur­es. And it is least equipped to fight back.

How the continent will tackle the solid waste produced by its more than 1.2 billion residents, many of them eager consumers in growing economies, is a major question for environmen­talists and government­s alike.

Most African countries lack the resources needed to process the growing amount of solid waste, said Maria Leonor Sales, a consultant with the African Developmen­t Bank. Nearly 20 of the world’s 50 biggest dumpsites are on the continent, according to Waste Atlas.

On top of that, Africa is now a dumping ground for waste from other, often developed, countries, UN Environmen­t pointed out in a report earlier this year.

The fastest-growing regions for waste generation are subSaharan Africa and South Asia, where it is expected to triple and double, respective­ly, by 2050, the World Bank said in a September report. By then, the regions will be producing 35 per cent of the world’s trash.

Much of the waste in lowincome countries, about 90 per cent, is openly dumped or burned. That contribute­s to worsening air quality while the poor are most affected, the World Bank said.

The burning of waste is a key contributo­r to climate change. In 2016, five per cent of global emissions were generated from solidwaste management, excluding transporta­tion, the bank’s report said.

Safe, sustainabl­e solid waste management could be an engine for economic growth, Sales said. Recycling and innovative products could create jobs while addressing social and environmen­tal issues.

But government­s would have to sign on and recognize the value of landfill pickers such as Kiarie and the roughly 600 others who join him there every day.

“Perception­s are one of the main challenges as people do not view waste as a resource,” said Catherina Schenck, a professor with the University of the Western Cape in South Africa who has researched waste pickers. “This includes the policy-makers down to the consumers.”

Transition­ing to a greener economy and sustainabl­e waste management will require informal workers like Kiare to become part of a recognized system, following health and environmen­tal guidelines and receiving stable incomes and benefits in return.

Experts say recycling companies then can be more efficient and have a guaranteed supply of raw materials.

Africa has the opportunit­y to unlock at least $8 billion every year in resource value into the economy by changing the way we think about waste, said Prof. Linda Godfrey, an expert on waste management with the South Africa-based Council for Scientific and Industrial Research.

The African Union has said member countries should divert 50 per cent of the waste they produce to recycling, reuse and recovery by 2030. Currently, the continent recycles only four per cent.

Unfortunat­ely, investment in such projects in Africa is still seen as high-risk by the private sector, Godfrey said. She said strong political will is needed.

Kiarie knows the risks of his current work. Landslides in dumps can be deadly. The threat of injury or infection is high. The landfill where he roams, Dandora, was deemed full in 2001. Yet it continues to operate, supporting people from the bottom rungs of Nairobi’s economy.

Kiare’s previous job as a day labourer in constructi­on paid him $5 but he would go without work for long periods, which almost got him evicted. Now he can take home between $10 and $50 a day from recycling. He has moved into a bigger house and is now married with three children.

Most Kenyans, who look down on those who work in the country’s sprawling landfills, live below $2 a day.

“Nowadays I don’t hear from the landlord,” he said.

 ?? BEN CURTIS, AP ?? A man who scavenges for recyclable materials for a living takes a break on top of garbage at the dump in Nairobi, Kenya. How the continent tackles the growing solid waste produced by its 1.2 billion residents is a major question in the fight against climate change.
BEN CURTIS, AP A man who scavenges for recyclable materials for a living takes a break on top of garbage at the dump in Nairobi, Kenya. How the continent tackles the growing solid waste produced by its 1.2 billion residents is a major question in the fight against climate change.

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