Waste collectors play a pivotal role in the plastic supply chain, making sure plastic is collected instead of making its way into waste streams. But even while playing an important role in the chain, these individuals typically are not valued adequately for the contribution they make.<\/p>\n
“What we’re seeing is these people are stigmatized, but they really know their waste. They know what will sell. They pick it up. They sell it. They send their children to school,” said Bharati Chaturvedi, founder and director of Chintan, an Indian-based organization that reduces waste and consumption, during a plenary discussion at Circularity 20 last week. “We would have so much more plastic in our rivers and in our oceans if we didn’t have the informal sector, globally, not just for India.”<\/p>\n
She observed that in South Asia and parts of Southeast Asia, waste collectors often earn minimum wages but work in terrible conditions. In addition to addressing the waste and consumption habits in the communities it serves, Chintan uses waste collection services as a tool to fight poverty, child labor, gender-based violence and exclusion and climate change, while creating green jobs.<\/p>\n
As COVID-19 rages on in countries around the world \u2014 in late August, India set a record for the world’s highest single-day increase<\/a> in coronavirus cases \u2014 waste collectors are continuing to work.<\/p>\n “These are people who are also the frontline workers fighting climate change,” said Chaturvedi, noting that waste collectors are mitigating the ocean plastic problem. “Nobody recognizes them as the climate warriors and environmentalists that they truly are. And I’m really talking about 1.5 million to 2 million people on this planet.”<\/p>\n So, how does their work begin to be valued?<\/p>\n