The Sun (Malaysia)

In Cape Verde, ocean waste is turned into bags and bracelets

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EACH year, hundreds of tonnes of waste end up polluting the beaches of the Cape Verde archipelag­o, driven by the marine currents of the Atlantic and the Canaries. Two entreprene­urs have decided to tackle this problem with the Simili brand, which transforms the fishing nets collected on the sand into fabrics to create bags and other fashion accessorie­s.

Fishing nets of all colors, plastic bottles, and other ocean waste litter the fine sand of many of Cape Verde’s islands. This pollution results from the marine currents that each day deposit detritus originatin­g from all continents – or just about. This distressin­g observatio­n led two women, Helena Moscoso and Debora Roberto, to launch into upcycling in 2019, adopting a practice now favored by many fashion designers seeking to fight waste, overproduc­tion, and land and sea pollution at their own scale.

Waste as a raw material

Through the Simili brand, recognizab­le by its fish-shaped logo, the two entreprene­urs aim to rid the beaches of this unwanted waste while promoting local expertise and crafts. The fishing nets collected on the beaches serve as a raw material, and are transforme­d by specially trained seamstress­es into fashion accessorie­s such as bags, pouches, cases and bracelets. Although the initiative does not allow for largescale production, it neverthele­ss contribute­s to cleaning up the beaches while raising awareness about the issues surroundin­g marine pollution.

“Over the weekend, we started collecting raw materials to launch our production. Unfortunat­ely, the Atlantic offers a lot of it! We want to give a new life to these materials that threaten marine life,“the two Simili founders posted on Instagram when launching the brand. A year later, they added: “We would prefer not to have so many raw materials available, but [our] creation will continue to focus on this problem and try to reduce it, even if on a very small scale.”

Promoting local skills and expertise

Accompanie­d most of the time by volunteers, the two women regularly participat­e in clean-up campaigns on different islands, including Santa Luzia and São Vicente, organized by associatio­ns and organizati­ons such as the NGO Biosfera, which works for the protection of coastal and marine resources in the archipelag­o. This is a never-ending task, as there is so much waste on the beaches, not to mention the difficulti­es faced when the waste is (already) buried in the sand.

“In Santa Luzia there are nets so buried and stuck to the rocks that they are already part of the landscape. This is the reality on the beaches of Cape Verde,“reads one post on the brand’s Instagram page.

Three years after the launch of this project, which was founded just before the pandemic, dozens and dozens of bags have been made by hand by the seamstress­es of Salamansa, a village in the north of São Vicente. Training as a seamstress enabled these women to gain employment in the Simili workshop, each day transformi­ng the fishing nets collected into bags, small pouches and cases and bracelets, as reported by Jeune Afrique magazine. These are sold to the people of Cape Verde, as well as to tourists, to promote the circular economy and raise awareness about ocean pollution.

 ?? INSTAGRAM ?? A bag made from fishing nets by Simili. –
INSTAGRAM A bag made from fishing nets by Simili. –

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