
| GATE - 1993/01 - Solid Waste Management (GTZ GATE Magazine, 1993) |
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Waste avoidance, waste reduction and recycling- these are the
principles by which the industrialized countries are meanwhile trying to cope
with their mountains of refuse. But in many respects the concept has still not
been implemented in practice, above all as regards waste avoidance and
recycling. The fact is that it isn't easy to overcome the happy-go-lucky
throwaway mentality. For far too long we overlooked the fact that the solid and
liquid waste we generate in households and industry contains substances that can
be reused.
In the field of waste management, the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur
Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) is trying to help its partners avoid the
mistakes of the affluent societies in the North. In many Third World cities
waste disposal is a disaster. More than half the waste is left uncollected, with
terrible consequences for public health.
As the projects show, building
awareness at community level of the need for waste management is a lengthy
process. However, the authors of our Focus articles have some encouraging
initial successes to report. Local, privately run waste management systems are
the most effective. Waste collection and recycling go hand in hand. But the
projects also show that waste collectors are often the poorest of the poor. As a
rule, the importance of their contribution to a cleaner environment and to
recovering scarce raw materials is completely underestimated.
Peter
Bosse-Brekenfeld