Cairo without pigs

Friday, September 25, 2009 by

As you probably read in last week’s Sunday Times, the Egyptian government may now regret having killed all the pigs in Cairo in a misguided effort to prevent the spread of  Swine Flu. With no pigs to feed, the Zabaleen have no reason to go door to door collecting food scraps anymore, which means more trash ends up in the streets.

Garbage Dreams poster

Garbage Dreams poster

Filmmaker Mai Iskander emailed me after the piece ran to remind me that her documentary Garbage Dreams about three young men growing up in Cairo’s trash picking community touches on one of the core issues of the day: source separation.

It’s an interesting lens to put to the developed world. What distinguishes modern countries from those struggling to “catch up” isn’t just the fact that we have high-tech recycling facilities, it’s that we are more or less willing to sort our trash in our own homes.

The Zabaleen hope that by encouraging their neighbors to pre-sort trash, they can hang on to a piece of the profits from the waste industry before foreign waste hauling companies eclipse the need for local trash pickers. And it looks like their campaign is finally getting some buy-in from local authorities.

Sadly, there no longer seems to be much call to sort out food waste as well. Let’s hope the increased trash in the streets at the very least serves as a political tool encouraging Egyptians to think about what happens to trash after it leaves the home and what they might do to reduce waste and recycle more.

The trash of death

Friday, September 25, 2009 by

Ever thought of why people keep alarming there are too many people on the planet, creating too much trash, but never discuss what happens when we ourselves become trash, in that crude, horrible form of corpses? Swedish marine biologist Susanne Wiigh-Mäsak has, and she is up to something. Actually, she has been for many years, but I just recently learned about it from the September issue of the Swedish magazine Filter (who refuse to publish articles online).

Wiigh-Mäsak started pondering sometime in the late 90’s on the bad logic that we don’t really smoothly return to earth and become shadow and dust, but rather rot in coffins and at long length make it out of the coffins in the form of harmful liquids tainting the soil  and subsoil water, or are disbanded all over the atmosphere in cremation. While I personally like the idea of being sent of in particles too small to see, one must admit she has a case.

Wiigh-Mäsak’s sollution, soon to be rolled out by her enterprise Promessa Organic Inc., is to freeze-dry corpses with liquid nitrogen, and then bury them in coffins made of corn starch, just a foot below ground. She further suggests a tree or bush to be planted above the coffin, as primary beneficiary of the soon-to-be-mould corpse and coffin. This new method obviously sparks questions on ethics (“liquid nitrogen” has a rather unethical ring to it, no?), questions to which Wiigh-Mäsak gave this reply, to Filter:

I would like to show [the Swedish IRS] a twenty year old grave. After that, we could discuss ethics.

Our Lady of Detritus

Friday, September 25, 2009 by

Fall is a wonderful time to visit the Bronx. In addition to the changing seasons, this weekend you have an even greater incentive to head to the borough of parks: Jill Sigman‘s ” Our Lady of Detritus.”

Our Lady of Detritus

Our Lady of Detritus

“A portable, interdisciplinary performance installation about trash and transcendence; a traveling grassroots campaign fueled by experimentation, green energy sources and community interaction.”

via the Freshkills Park Blog

Trash Track UK!

Wednesday, September 23, 2009 by

By now, you surely know all about the super hip Trash Track. For our UK readers, there are possibilities of getting your very own refuse involved! New Scientist are currently accepting applications for UK trash to be tracked, closing September 30th. As there’s only one spot open, make sure to carefully craft that 75 word motivation on what you would like to tag and why. And do let us know what you submit!

Food trash insanity rant

Wednesday, September 23, 2009 by

Back from the motherland, thinking “honestly, what are they thinking?”

Background: Swedish Public Radio are reporting today on food waste. Previously, this discusson has been focusing mainly on households (who throw out about 11 pounds of edible food every week). Today our lovely radio turned the attention to supermarkets: Annualy, supermarkets in Sweden (population 9 million) throw away 110 000 us short tonnes of perfectly edible food. Value US$ 292 million. Food giants are saying that they only do what customers want them to do, and that putting “old” food on sale is bad for their corporate image.

Again: What are they thinking? (I’m thinking I should resaddle and head into the food business. There’s obviously lots of tra$h to collect.)

For those of you who now feel guilty, check out Love Food Hate Waste, a nice little UK resource on how to at least avoid this in your home. They have recepies!

Trash Track in the news

Wednesday, September 16, 2009 by

Remember that supercool MIT project sticking probes in trash? It is on. Check out the nytimes.com coverage.

Baggage Claims

Tuesday, September 15, 2009 by

I’m back! So much trash to catch up on. For starters, last week the Wall Street Journal compared the environmental impact, usability and, of course, stylishness,  of reusable shopping bags in this slide show.

Photo credit: Boyle + Gardner

Photo credit: Boyle + Gardner

Trash hiatus

Thursday, September 3, 2009 by

I’m heading to Rio, Vic is heading to Stockholm, it may be a slow week for garblogging. Catch you on the other side of the long weekend. Hopefully we’ll return with fun tales of foreign trash. Like this rad ecological center in Brazil. Thanks for the link, Keith!

Trash detail

Thursday, September 3, 2009 by

Chris Brown has been sentenced to pick up trash in punishment for beating up Rihanna. My guess, this will be decidedly less funny than when Michelle Rodriguez or, my favorite, Naomi Campbell got assigned the same chore.

Greening your game

Thursday, September 3, 2009 by

Peter Lehner of the NRDC wrote about recycling at the US Open on the Huffington Post yesterday. His article and these promo videos highlight some nice steps the event is taking, namely using recycled and recyclable disposable products in the food court and recycling the thousands of tennis balls and tennis ball cans it takes to put on the tournament. Makes me wonder: why do tennis balls come in plastic cans?

Slow wear advisors

Thursday, September 3, 2009 by

Rewardrobe is a London-based consulting firm that advises clients on “slow wear” and the sustainability of their wardrobes. The idea, I think, is that they advise people how to pick items that last and revamp what they have so it reads fresh and fashionable in a modern environment. I wonder if the amount of shopping offset by this firm offsets the amount of energy generated to earn the cash to pay their fees. What do you think?

via Green Girls Global

Save Canvas

Wednesday, September 2, 2009 by

As part of a piece installed in a series of vacant buildings in Minneapolis, artists Aaron Bickner and Andrew Shannon created a walk-through pop-up book of fantastical urban scenes. They called it “Save Canvas.” The idea: make use of a bunch of prime real estate scheduled for demolition and rebirth as a fancy condo, but which has been sitting empty for several years as redevelopment projects are put on hold in this bad economy. Temporary upcycling, if you will.

Save Canvas

Save Canvas

Here’s a video and a comprehensive post from the blog eyeteeth, which is also where I ripped the photo.

According to the site, “Save Canvas” ran for the month of August, so I sadly will not get to see it when I visit the Twin Cities in a couple weeks. As an aside: I found out about this supercool initiative via an alert from the Walker Art Center Teen Arts Council, of which Bickner and I are both alum. The idea behind the council is to involve young people in planning and programs at the Walker to ensure that the center is an inviting place for the next generation to appreciate modern art. As a founding member, it’s nice to see that the WACTAC is still going strong and that its alum are involved in such innovative projects as this one. You can fan WACTAC on Facebook here.

Weekly Compactor: Blogroll Edition

Wednesday, September 2, 2009 by

Recent finds from around the garblogosphere:

PET pouffes

Wednesday, September 2, 2009 by

Keith R. over at The Temas Blog has been periodically updating a series of trash photos of amazing things made from garbage in Latin America. The latest installment features sofas and pouffes made from PET bottles in Brazil as part of  a project called Reciclagem e Cultura or “Recycling and Culture.” Apparently what began as an upcycling (thanks for the shout out, Keith) endeavor blossomed into an income-generating business program.

PET pouffes

PET pouffes

I highly recommend clicking through to read the whole story peppered with photos and video clips, here’s a teaser:

In part to get the waste collection going and get the raw materials they need, and in part to gain community acceptance for their Cooperativa Usina de Reciclagem, [local foundation] Onda Azul offered favela residents an exchange: bring in 75 to 250 empty two-liter PET bottles, and get a chair or pouffe (what some may call a tuffet, hassock or ottoman) made using PET bottles

….

The program proved so popular that they had to restrict the exchange to one pouffe per household.  Even so, nearly every house in that favela now has one of the so-called pufes ecológicos (“ecological pouffes”).

I’m headed to Rio tomorrow night for vacation. I wonder if I’ll meet anyone with an ecological pouffe!

The most carcinogenic place on the planet

Tuesday, September 1, 2009 by

Via Unconsumption, found this well produced news piece from CBS 60 Minutes on global tra$h. Among other interesting details, I recommend it for the tracing of high-lead monitors from supposedly super ethical US recycling company Executive Recycling, via the Hong Kong harbour, the Hong Kong mayor and into gangster tra$h land, where the local industry has transformed the community to the most carcinogenic in the world.

As the piece concludes however, Executive Recycling are not the only ones in this dirty business. Apparently, the feds are on the case. Tra$h Cops, gotta love them!