Leicester Mercury

The West must stop exporting plastic waste to poorer nations

Dumping items on countries in Africa and elsewhere is harming the environmen­t and disproport­ionately affects women and children, argues Kutoma Wakunuma, associate professor of informatio­n systems at De Montfort University

-

IF we are to build a greener, fairer and more equal society in the wake of Covid-19, it is time for rich countries to end their practice of dumping plastic waste in developing countries. This not only harms the environmen­t but disproport­ionately affects the women and girls who tend to clear it up.

The problem was made worse for many developing countries when China announced its refusal to accept other countries’ plastic waste in 2018.

The result has been an increase in plastic waste exports to Africa, much of which is proving hard to recycle and is ending up in rivers and oceans.

On top of this, the pandemic is generating ever-increasing amounts of plastic waste, especially singleuse items like medical gloves and disposable masks.

In some areas of Africa – where about 411 million face masks are discarded every day – lack of plastic waste management infrastruc­ture and weak regulation­s around dumping waste mean the situation is only getting worse.

Now, countries like Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Senegal and Kenya are finding themselves flooded with plastic waste. This is overwhelmi­ngly affecting poor, socially marginalis­ed people, and women in particular.

Although plastic waste can be seen as a trade between developed and developing countries, which allows the latter to be paid in exchange for dealing with that waste, this trade is not an equal one.

Developing countries are likely to accept plastic waste from developed countries because it offers another potential source of income for their population living below the poverty line.

It is projected that 27 million to 40 million people in sub-Saharan Africa will fall into extreme poverty during 2021.

It is no wonder such regions see plastic waste as a lucrative source of opportunit­y which can contribute to easing poverty.

However, the amounts paid to waste pickers – usually women – by private waste collecting companies barely make a dent in pickers’ financial needs.

Payments of less than 4 pence a kilogram for collecting plastic bottles for recycling are normal.

That waste sometimes ends up burned, rather than being recycled.

In 2020, 40 per cent of the UK’s plastic waste was sent to Turkey, where instead of being recycled some of it was illegally dumped and burned.

Research in 2019 suggested that the equivalent of a double-decker bus full of plastic ends up dumped or burned every second.

Many plastics contain toxic chemicals that can enter the environmen­t if products are discarded or burnt.

This includes substances that have been linked to miscarriag­es and cancer.

Picking plastic waste not only does not pay well, it also comes at a price in terms of health and security.

Dumped waste can contain hazardous materials like broken glass and syringes carrying infectious illnesses. Plus, women are often forced to collect plastic from the outskirts of cities: places likely to have higher rates of crime.

Most, however, do not have a choice.

They must risk their safety to make a living and provide for their families, due to widespread lack of education for women and girls.

Across Africa, 3 million more girls than boys between six to 11 years of age will not be offered the opportunit­y to attend school.

The impacts of this ripple into their future, making it far less likely for women to find well-paying jobs and forcing many to resort to lowpaid, dangerous work.

Many poorer women in African countries also reside in informal settlement­s, where waste easily accumulate­s due to poor rubbish collection services.

Accumulati­ng plastic can damage inadequate water drainage systems, resulting in flourishin­g colonies of dangerous bacteria.

For example, Zambia has experience­d several cholera outbreaks due to poor drainage worsened in part by plastic-clogged systems.

IT is imperative to find ways of improving women’s situations in developing countries if we are to realise a truly greener, fairer and more equal world.

Some next steps to consider – if such a world is to become a reality – would include developing countries creating more stringent legislatio­n against dumping plastic, increasing women’s education and involving more women in decision-making processes around how to deal with plastic waste.

What is more, creating social incentives for reducing plastic waste – for example, by paying pickers more – is key in societies where social status is attached to those who can afford bottled plastic water and removed from those who then must pick up their litter.

Community-based awareness programmes promoting the importance of plastic waste management – run via community clubs, social platforms like Facebook and Instagram, or local radio stations – could help achieve this.

If picking plastic waste became better paid, this kind of cultural shift would not only help to empower women pickers economical­ly but may be able to eliminate stigma attached to picking.

With a resulting influx of formalised training courses, policies to keep pickers safe and opportunit­ies for pickers to speak out about the issues attached to their work, many others will hopefully be attracted to help keep their environmen­ts clean and safe.

■ This article first appeared on the academic papers and debate website: theconvers­ation.com

 ?? GETTY ?? DANGEROUS WORK: Picking through (local) waste at a tip in Senegal
GETTY DANGEROUS WORK: Picking through (local) waste at a tip in Senegal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom