A new initiative Latin American will attempt to establish formal recycling markets, integrating the millions of people who have long supported themselves as informal waste collectors.
It is estimated that over four million people in Latin America live on income earned from collecting recyclable waste materials. These people, including entire families, work in unhealthy conditions with materials that may pose risks to health.
The initiative brings together recyclers, consumer products companies, municipalities, educational institutions, and civil society organizations to develop action plans for incorporating informal workers into local value chains, thereby improving their livelihoods and working conditions.
The program will make use of lessons learned from projects underway in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Peru, and other developing countries, and provide these experiences as models for stakeholders.
The program is supported by the Fundación Avina, the Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF), the Water and Sanitation Division of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), The Coca-Cola Company and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
"It is critical to support the transformation of the market and the organization of informal recyclers to improve their economic and social situation," says Nancy Lee, MIF General Manager. "Greater coordination among recyclers, businesses and municipalities will improve the quality of life of people engaged in this business."
The program seeks to improve the socio-economic status of waste collectors, involve the private sector as an active partner in facilitating their access to the formal market, and improve the regulatory framework to facilitate market functions.
"Despite their key role in a new market such as recycling, informal waste collectors and their families remain isolated from society and the economy," says Valdemar de Oliveira Neto, Fundación AVINA's Director of Continental Initiatives. "This project will enable us to bring together all stakeholders to create an environment that respects their work, demonstrating that it is not only honorable, but also valuable to society."
In some cases, informal collectors are responsible for recovering up to 90% of recycled consumer products materials. But the benefits they receive represent only a very small percentage of the value generated in the value chain. Several initiatives have proven that benefits flowing to these collectors increase through their participation in inclusive businesses sponsored by multi-sectoral alliances.
"The experience of the past 20 years in the region has shown the need for including the informal sector as an integral part of the formal system of municipal waste management in a process led by municipalities themselves and as a means for achieving economic sustainability of such activities," said Federico Basañes, Chief of the IDB's Water and Sanitation Division. "The pursuit of such integration is one of the main objectives of the present initiative."
"This program provides us with the opportunity to contribute to the development of sustainable communities in two areas of particular relevance: social and economic inclusion of people living under very adverse conditions, and environmental protection," said Jose Octavio Reyes, President of Coca-Cola Latin America. "This program also contributes to our vision of ‘zero waste' for our packaging, where increased use of recycled materials in our bottles constitutes a central part of this vision."
MIF is providing $4 million in financing to the project, which will complemented initially with $1 million from the IDB Water and Sanitation Division's AquaFund, $1.4 million from the Fundación Avina, and $2 million from The Coca-Cola Company. The program was launched during the VIII Inter-American Conference on Corporate Social Responsibility, which was held by MIF in Asuncion, Paraguay May 24-26.
Article Courtesy of: http://www.sustainablebusiness.com
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