Dubai Telegraph - 'Drive-throw' recycling aims to ease Lebanon garbage crisis

EUR -
AED 4.246011
AFN 72.838394
ALL 95.900007
AMD 432.670294
ANG 2.069629
AOA 1060.201196
ARS 1612.785171
AUD 1.631697
AWG 2.083985
AZN 1.96758
BAM 1.955189
BBD 2.311377
BDT 140.815959
BGN 1.976241
BHD 0.436492
BIF 3407.948889
BMD 1.156163
BND 1.47234
BOB 7.930554
BRL 6.037467
BSD 1.147641
BTN 106.919948
BWP 15.660102
BYN 3.54859
BYR 22660.802746
BZD 2.308078
CAD 1.58721
CDF 2630.271542
CHF 0.912364
CLF 0.026733
CLP 1055.566138
CNY 7.978048
CNH 7.973447
COP 4269.514908
CRC 536.929751
CUC 1.156163
CUP 30.63833
CVE 110.231478
CZK 24.467774
DJF 204.366084
DKK 7.470608
DOP 69.387999
DZD 152.897099
EGP 60.398557
ERN 17.342451
ETB 179.181285
FJD 2.551767
FKP 0.866034
GBP 0.862186
GEL 3.139009
GGP 0.866034
GHS 12.52719
GIP 0.866034
GMD 85.556476
GNF 10057.854367
GTQ 8.779368
GYD 240.096985
HKD 9.056771
HNL 30.376368
HRK 7.533103
HTG 150.53292
HUF 390.449684
IDR 19565.753309
ILS 3.615716
IMP 0.866034
INR 107.439086
IQD 1503.329828
IRR 1520499.398226
ISK 143.803649
JEP 0.866034
JMD 180.303609
JOD 0.819667
JPY 183.061713
KES 148.856534
KGS 101.104059
KHR 4600.561157
KMF 494.837917
KPW 1040.490233
KRW 1730.01369
KWD 0.354145
KYD 0.956401
KZT 551.897392
LAK 24621.299593
LBP 102773.857076
LKR 357.679463
LRD 210.017041
LSL 19.336952
LTL 3.41385
LVL 0.699352
LYD 7.349701
MAD 10.783421
MDL 20.11171
MGA 4775.506442
MKD 61.619725
MMK 2427.680761
MNT 4127.12739
MOP 9.259504
MRU 45.803477
MUR 53.773403
MVR 17.862421
MWK 1990.077595
MXN 20.522305
MYR 4.554122
MZN 73.881892
NAD 19.336952
NGN 1563.69962
NIO 42.23679
NOK 10.988478
NPR 171.068758
NZD 1.964547
OMR 0.44454
PAB 1.147641
PEN 3.952981
PGK 4.953451
PHP 69.199276
PKR 320.500462
PLN 4.26885
PYG 7457.667585
QAR 4.185227
RON 5.093134
RSD 117.453481
RUB 99.602209
RWF 1675.37602
SAR 4.340832
SBD 9.305477
SCR 17.168814
SDG 694.853891
SEK 10.753528
SGD 1.47934
SHP 0.867422
SLE 28.499321
SLL 24244.181045
SOS 654.695242
SRD 43.358429
STD 23930.248207
STN 24.49234
SVC 10.041859
SYP 128.06281
SZL 19.341951
THB 37.747573
TJS 10.988463
TMT 4.046572
TND 3.389584
TOP 2.783763
TRY 51.227637
TTD 7.778567
TWD 36.90359
TZS 2992.051478
UAH 50.467616
UGX 4337.680891
USD 1.156163
UYU 46.485461
UZS 13989.685172
VES 525.690886
VND 30426.75234
VUV 137.625456
WST 3.172703
XAF 655.751911
XAG 0.015594
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.124589
XCG 2.068253
XDR 0.815545
XOF 655.751911
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.80244
ZAR 19.377588
ZMK 10406.858107
ZMW 22.464974
ZWL 372.284145
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.9

    +0.04%

  • JRI

    -0.1630

    12.16

    -1.34%

  • BCC

    -1.9800

    69.86

    -2.83%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.85

    +0.09%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • NGG

    -1.8700

    85.53

    -2.19%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.37

    +0.59%

  • RIO

    -2.0700

    85.65

    -2.42%

  • AZN

    0.5100

    188.93

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.73

    -0.08%

  • BTI

    0.6300

    58.72

    +1.07%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.82

    -0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5900

    16.01

    -3.69%

  • BP

    1.2500

    45.86

    +2.73%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    14.42

    +0.35%

'Drive-throw' recycling aims to ease Lebanon garbage crisis
'Drive-throw' recycling aims to ease Lebanon garbage crisis / Photo: JOSEPH EID - AFP

'Drive-throw' recycling aims to ease Lebanon garbage crisis

Beirut motorists pull up to a drive-through counter -- not for fast-food, but to exchange empty bottles and cardboard for cash, a novelty in a country long plagued by garbage crises.

Text size:

Festering landfills often overflow in crisis-hit Lebanon, waste is burnt illegally at informal dump sites and rubbish floats off the coast in the Mediterranean Sea.

State-run recycling has largely fallen by the wayside in a nation that has been grappling with a three-year-long economic collapse.

"The government used to be in charge of this sector and now it is bankrupt," said Pierre Baaklini, 32, founder of Lebanon Waste Management.

Around a year ago he started the first "Drive Throw" recycling station and opened a second in February in Burj Hammoud, a Beirut suburb known for its proximity to a landfill.

With more than 80 percent of Lebanon's population living in poverty, the poorest eke out a meagre living picking through dumpsters for anything they can sell for recycling or scrap.

Baaklini said his customers are generally environmentally conscious and among the minority "with sufficient income".

People drive up to the station in their cars, register their details and place bags and boxes of loosely sorted recyclables on the counter. Workers accept everything from cardboard to plastic, glass, metal, e-waste, batteries and even used cooking oil.

A sign lists the prices -- a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of cardboard is worth 2,000 Lebanese pounds (around two cents), while aluminium cans are worth 50,000 pounds a kilogram.

Rony Nashef, 38, handed over bulging bags of plastic, in a country where many rely on bottled water for drinking.

Recycling "is definitely a much better solution to Lebanon's trash problem", he said.

Incompetence and corruption caused a spectacular waste crisis in Lebanon in 2015, when rivers of garbage filled the streets and ran into the sea, leading to protests by thousands and harming the country's image.

No viable long-term solution has since been found, and the destruction of two sorting plants in a catastrophic August 2020 explosion at Beirut port worsened the problem.

- 'For the community' -

Behind the scenes at Drive Throw, the recyclables are sorted carefully, while the plastic is later shredded and cleaned.

The two facilities have taken in a total of 450 tonnes of recyclables, founder Baaklini said, adding that the materials are sold to both local and international clients.

"What we are doing here is also about education" and awareness-raising, he said, as school students sometimes visit the facility to learn about recycling.

Environmental engineer Ziad Abichaker said recycling had always been neglected by authorities.

Only "about 10 percent" of Lebanon's daily waste load of 5,000 tonnes is recycled, said Abichaker, who heads Cedar Environmental, a group that specialises in "zero waste" technologies.

Authorities were studying a national waste management plan but there has been no progress due to institutional deadlock, he said.

A caretaker government with limited powers has been at the helm for more than a year.

Abichaker said "90 percent of the sorting plants built over the years" with money from international donations had stopped working, pointing to "faulty designs" and "corruption".

In Burj Hammoud, Renata Rahme, 47, said the first time she rolled up to the Drive Throw recycling station, she didn't know she was supposed to separate the materials.

"Now I'm trying to do more sorting," said Rahme, a film producer who brought in a crate with lights and other small electrical appliances.

"The point is not the monetary return as much as participating in the initiative," she said. "We're trying to do something better for the community, for the country, for society."

J.Chacko--DT