Gulf News

Let’s start plogging

A SWEDISH CIVIC FITNESS MOVEMENT PROMOTES PICKING UP TRASH WHILE JOGGING OR TAKING A WALK TO KEEP THE CITY CLEAN. ARE DUBAI RESIDENTS UP TO IT?

- BY SAJILA SASEENDRAN Senior Reporter

A Swedish fitness movement promotes picking up trash while jogging. Are Dubai residents up to it? |

Sweden’s latest civic movement ‘plogging’ is becoming a new workout trend in many countries. Plogging comes from the Swedish phrase plocka upp, meaning to pick up trash. It is a combinatio­n of people picking up trash while jogging, hiking, or just walking around the street or park.

It started as an organised activity in Sweden around 2016 and spread to other countries in 2018, following increased concern about plastic pollution.

The word as such is not very familiar to the UAE residents though many here have been involved in cleanup initiative­s across the emirates.

Volunteeri­ng initiative

Dubai Municipali­ty, for example, runs a volunteeri­ng initiative called “An Hour with the Cleaner.” This is a chance for corporate employees, students and others to join the street cleaners in Dubai and help clean up deserts, beaches, streets and parks.

According to the Waste Management Department, 3,542 people including 1,036 students took part in the initiative last year.

Employees of 47 government and private entities, and people of determinat­ion were also part of the programme.

In total, the participan­ts devoted 7,084 voluntary work hours in cleaning up Dubai during the Year of Giving.

Just the cigarette butts collected through the initiative in 2017 stood at a whopping 400,000.

The initiative to beautify the city helped save more than Dh42,000 and as many as 462 cleaners benefited from it. They were spared the burden of the cleanup job they had to do when volunteers joined them to help them in their hectic work.

Other campaigns such as “Clean up the World” also saw massive participat­ion of volunteers in cleaning streets, parks, deserts and beaches in the emirate. During the “Clean up the World” campaign in 2017, the municipali­ty said, volunteers collected a whopping one million plastic bottles in a giant trash bag set up at LuLu Hypermarke­t in Al Barsha in just five days. There are several community groups and fitness enthusiast­s who also take part in such initiative­s.

Marine world

Dubai Municipali­ty has also formed a large group of divers, who volunteer to help keep the emirate’s rich marine world clean. The “Day for Dubai” initiative launched by Shaikh Hamdan Bin Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai, also encourages people to dedicate a day of volunteeri­ng work to serve the city which includes clean up campaigns.

Yet, plogging has not become a norm as part of daily life here.

Abdul Majeed Abdul Aziz Al Saifaie, director of the Waste Management Department, feels that is mainly because most areas where people go for walking and jogging are regularly cleaned up by municipal workers. However, he would like to see more daily participat­ion from the residents in keeping the city clean.

First of all, he said, the aim should be to prevent littering.

Plogging started as an organised activity in Sweden around 2016 and spread to other countries in 2018, following increased concern about plastic pollution. 3,542 people joined An Hour with the Cleaner campaign 400,000 cigarette butts collected during the campaign

“Reduce, recycle and dump the waste in the right place. These are the three most important things that residents can do to help keep Dubai clean,” Al Saifaie told Gulf News.

He said the concept of plogging can have a more positive impact if people help discard the recyclable trash in places designated for it.

“We have set up 13 Smart

Sustainabl­e Oasis Centres, where people can easily deposit as many as 18 types of recyclable items including plastic. We are expecting shopping centres and malls to come forward for setting up these collection centres for recyclable­s,” said Al Saifaie.

Once people have closer access to these recyclable deposit centres, ploggers could probably

walk the extra mile to help promote recycling as well. Plogging enthusiast­s consider the activity a more effective and satisfying way of work out as they bend, squat and stretch more while giving back to the society and helping save the nature.

They say plogging may take up extra time and effort, but the satisfacti­on it gives is unique.

Elsewhere in the West, people

organise plogging events on Earth Day which falls on April 22. Probably, it is time for Dubai residents to catch up with them.

So, next time when you go for a walk, don’t just walk past the plastic bottle on the road or any litter for that matter. Pick it up and put it in the nearby bin. wear a pair of gloves and carry a trash bag. Let’s start plogging.

 ?? Ahmed Ramzan/Gulf News ?? Teenagers cleaning an area around Union Square Metro Station in Deira. A group of teens has teamed up with Dubai Municipali­ty to be a part of their ‘Clean Up The World’ campaign.
Ahmed Ramzan/Gulf News Teenagers cleaning an area around Union Square Metro Station in Deira. A group of teens has teamed up with Dubai Municipali­ty to be a part of their ‘Clean Up The World’ campaign.
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