The Lowvelder

Mandela Day

- Bridget Mpande

War on plastics continues past 67 minutes

MBOMBELA - Stabilis, BUCO, Sanibonani, Rooikat, Innibos and Lowvelder joined hands for Mandela Day to clean the streets for their 67 minutes. The trash they picked up was neatly collected by special BUCO trucks for this purpose, but the plastic was deposited into a specially constructe­d heart, located at Crossing Centre.

From here the plastic will be recycled.

Jack Magongo, an independen­t environmen­talist, said he is currently cooperatin­g with a group of 12 women based in Pienaar outside Mbombela in a waste management and recycling project. He said the cooperatio­n is part of a job creation project. Magongo said they have been working under Africa Green Earth Project and with the help of Innibos.

According to Magongo, there are 12 women benefiting financiall­y. “They sort the waste and they divide the incentives according to what has been collected in revenue in the market. Although they do not make the same amount every month,” he added.

The process of recycling starts after the community has dropped off the waste.

“We empty the heart and take the waste to Greens Waste, then sort it there. We weigh it according to the kilograms and sort it according to colours,” he said.

There are different colour categories; white, green, blue, brown, red and yellow.

“The white colour has more value and we call it ‘clear’. It makes it easy for us to make end products. Waste such as white containers and cold drink bottles are clear. Green and blue are usually sorted together; it can be things such as water bottles that are blue and green.

“Brown is your brown containers, but not the brown medicine bottles. They are hazardous. The red and yellow are very rare, although they can be found as sauce bottles and many more,” he explained.

Magongo said the community needs to remember that the aim is to harvest as much as they can, regardless of the colour of the waste.

In Mpumalanga they do not have a recycling plant that finalises everything, so they take it to Gauteng. It is then transforme­d into various products such as bags and clothes.

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 ??  ?? Mariolise le Roux, Pippa Botha, Sandra Jacobs and Alison Linde.
Mariolise le Roux, Pippa Botha, Sandra Jacobs and Alison Linde.
 ??  ?? BUCO came out in their numbers.
BUCO came out in their numbers.
 ??  ?? Henri Pieters from Stabilis.
Henri Pieters from Stabilis.

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