Archive for the ‘Trash Politics’ Category

More crisis less trash

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Municipal recycling stations in Sweden note a decrease in the stuff that one really doesn’t need to purchase, but swipe your credit card for anyway, like electronics. Less cash and more insecurity makes us cling on to that four year old thingie, even though our neighbour bought a cooler version. The extravagance we see in time of prosperity goes beyond the usual flat screen and Wii though, as trash worker Börde Edlund gives example of:

Before, people came here with entire kitchen furnishings because they had the wrong colour.

Idiotic beyond belief, the way we live. Sometimes it just hits me. Aaaargh!

Trashing the Galapagos

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Ever since I was a little girl, I have longed to see the Galapagos. My parents lived in Ecuador before I was born and to this day will not shut up about their visits to these magical islands full of amazing creatures. Embarrassing fact: both my mother and father still call me variations of the nickname ¨boopie¨ after the blue footed booby, a bird they once  saw there.

Over the next few days, my sister and I will finally get to see what all the fuss is about when we visit the islands with our mom. In preparation for this trip of a lifetime, I have done very little research. After wandering around Guayaquil all day, though, I got to thinking about—what else—trash and recycling. The boardwalk in this city is shockingly developed, lined with perfectly manicured patches of tropical vegetation and freshly painted playsets for children. There are police and trash bins every few hundred feet and even large paper, plastic and glass recycling bins at the major entrances (photos forthcoming). Not at all what I´d expected.

Then again, at the nearby iguana park, tourists wander unregulated, posing with, poking and feeding junk food to the lizards and littering indiscriminantly.

Anyway, on the eve of my Galapagos adventure, I find myself camped out in the hotel business center (charging the various devices I seem incapable of traveling without and) searching the terms ¨trash¨ and ¨galapagos¨.

Isabela Island, photo via SuperVegan

Isabela Island, photo via SuperVegan

So far, the two most interesting results mirror my high and low reactions to solid waste disposal in Guayaquil this afternoon: a write up on Treehugger last year heralding an innovative recycling venture and several blog postings from a self-described Galapagos-based vegan priate criticizing the government of Ecuador for doing little to regulate illegal dumping and animal smuggling. I will let you know what I see for myself in a few days. Hasta pronto, compañeros.

en route

Friday, March 13, 2009

Hi, it’s Leila. I’m sitting in the Miami airport waiting to board my flight to Guayaquil, reading the paper and attempting to blog via smartphone. If you haven’t yet, check out the NYT story on the failing recycling industry in China. The news hook isn’t new, but the profile of a trash collector named Tian Wengui is.

Related slideshow at nytimes.com/business.

Update: here are the links for the article and the slideshow

Trash Hiatus

Friday, March 13, 2009

Dear Trashies,

Leila is in Ecuador this week and Victor is in the process of relocating from Stockholm to NYC for six months. Please excuse us if posts are light this week.

Have fun in the archives!

Recommerce

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Rich and Bob started YouRenew.com out of their dorm room at Yale. The site promotes a concept they coined: recommerce. AKA recycling incentives. Basically, it’s a directory of how to get paid to recycle your electronics. Thoughts?

This American Life

Thursday, March 12, 2009

And of course, This American Life has devoted an entire show to our favorite topic. Have a listen to the garbage episode, first aired back in ’05.

Marine Trash

Thursday, March 12, 2009

ira-glass1Recently, I’ve become addicted to  back episodes of  This American Life. It’s a cliche of my demographic, I know, but I heart Ira Glass. This morning, while rooting through the onlne archives, I found this show, which includes an opening segment on the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. In it, Ira talks to an environmental sea captain with his own Web site on the topic of trashed bodies of water and efforts to restore them.

A.P.E.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

A friend at the UN researching nongovernmental organizations sent me this link today, to The Association for the Protection of the Environment (A.P.E.).

Garbage seperation project

Garbage seperation project

Since 1984 this NGO has worked to organize Egyptian garbage collecting families in and around Cairo. They run a composting center, health programs for mothers and children and a paper recycling program. They also coordinate a series of microfinance activities, helping families make and sell rag rugs, patchwork and recycled stationary. The funds raised go into community projects like new roads, schools, clinics and tree planting. Sadly, the links to buy their goods don’t seem to work or I would pimp them here.

Trash Mountain

Friday, March 6, 2009

To demonstrate the huge amount of recylclables that end up in the garbage at the University of Missouri, a group called Sustain Mizzou had a forklift drop four tons of trash bails in the center of campus and stood on top of it. They called the project trash mountain. This clever group has a host of ongoing awareness projects, including an initiative to offer recycling at tailgating events. Even their Sustain Mizzou t-shirts are recycled, a great idea for any trashie team. Rock on kids. And seriously, get some help with your Web site. All these neat projets should be better showcased online!

Al-Azhar Park

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Where there was once a dump, there is now green space. Al-Azhar Park in Cairo, Egypt grew out of a project of the Aga Khan Trust for Culture, aimed at revitalizing the Darb al-Ahmar neighborhood and restoring and showcasing the area’s historic art and architecture.

Al-Azhar Park in Cairo, once a rubble dump

Al-Azhar Park in Cairo, once a rubble dump

For the full story of this transformation, check out this fantastic post from City Parks Blog, complete with links to a PBS video. One estimate cited in the project overview found that the amount of green space per resident of Cairo was about a footprint before Al-Azhar. I hope it’s a little better now.

Photo via Tines Egyptian

The Independent

Friday, February 27, 2009

…has a very troublesome map over the plastic soup melange in the Pacific. Note that there are 100 million tonnes of trash floating around, dubbed “Eastern Garbage Patch” and “Western Garbage Patch”.

Home Dome

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Check out 12-year old Max Wallack’s winning invention from Design Squad’s Trash to Treasure competition. It’s a homeless shelter made from trash (specifically shipping pallets and packing peanuts).

Man these kids today. Remember the teen who discovered the cure for plastic?  Thanks for the tip, Joerg.

UPDATE: If you’re craving more on Max, check out the MAKE blog; and this photo set, via the MAKE flikr pool.

Learn Japanese: Pink Chirashi

Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Indecent Fliers Box

Indecent Fliers Box

That mischievous Little Shiva just posted this link to my facebook page, in which Tokyobling’s blog describes a special trash can (shown here) for “pink chirashi” or adult fliers.

If you are morally offended by the hand outs for adult shops and strip clubs, but too polite to say no to the smiling touts, feel free to use this trash can on your next visit to Tokyo.

Amazing.  Thanks Little Shiva and Tokyobling!

And speaking of the Japanese and their crazy ways, how awesome was Kunio Kato’s “Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto” reference while accepting the Oscar for best animated short?

Stockholm 2010!

Monday, February 23, 2009

And yay! Stockholm is the European Green Capital 2010! Read all about it, and inspire yourself on how your city too can reduce emissions per capita by 25% in just under 20 years.

European Green Capital

Monday, February 23, 2009

Tonight, at an award ceremony in Brussels, the European Commission* will announce which European cities will recieve the awards European Green Capital, for the years 2010 and 2011. The nominees are Oslo, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Bristol, Frieburg, Copenhagen, Münster and Hamburg.

The award has been established to reward local authorities’ efforts for a more sustainable urban environment. I.e., this is a reward for the politicians. And I do think we have to recognize that some of them indeed deserve a pat on the back, for fighting the tra$h industry, the oldtimers, listless voters and elecetion politics. Further, the coming environmental plans of the cities who win the awards will be presented on the award website, will return with a summary of that!

(*For those who might not know, the Commission is by far the most powerful institution of the European Union.)