Deccan Chronicle

Indonesian women battle plastic waste

Some of the cities have banned single-use plastics

- Jakarta, June

5: Alarmed by the mountains of plastic waste leaching into Indonesia’s waters, two best friends are taking on the environmen­tal menace by turning crisp bags and shampoo packets into paving bricks.

Ovy Sabrina and Novita Tan launched Rebricks after their country drew headlines as the second-biggest producer of marine waste in the world, behind China. Indonesia has pledged to reduce plastic waste by some 75 percent over the next four years — a mammoth task in the Southeast Asian nation of nearly 270 million people.

The pair got their start two years ago visiting food stalls across the capital Jakarta on the hunt for discarded instant coffee sachets, dried noodle packs and shopping bags.

Thanks to a viral social media campaign, the pair now receive reams of plastic waste packaging from donors across the country.

That rubbish flows in daily and is piled high at the little firm’s factory.

“It shows how Indonesian­s have a strong awareness of recycling plastic waste, but they don’t know where to do it,” 34-year-old Sabrina said.

Rebricks staff mulch the packaging into tiny flakes that are then mixed with cement and sand and moulded into building blocks.

They make look like convention­al bricks, but break one open and it is dotted with flecks of plastic.

The two entreprene­urs

Jakartaare­a say their method diverts waste that would have otherwise ended up in a landfill or the ocean — about four tonnes so far and counting.

“Every day, we can stop about 88,000 pieces of plastic sachets from littering the environmen­t,” Tan said, adding that the company has produced more than 100,000 bricks.

Some Indonesian cities have banned single-use plastics, but waste recycling is still rare.

The problem was underscore­d in 2018 by the discovery of a dead sperm whale that washed ashore in a national park with nearly six kilograms (13 pounds) of plastic waste in its stomach.

The Rebricks pair spent two years trying to perfect their method, and picked up hints from a building materials business run by Sabrina's family.

Some Indonesian entreprene­urs are molding plastic waste into flower vases, umbrellas or purses.

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