{"id":6568,"date":"2022-08-17T11:56:21","date_gmt":"2022-08-17T11:56:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.circularactionhub.org\/?p=6568"},"modified":"2022-08-17T12:14:31","modified_gmt":"2022-08-17T12:14:31","slug":"flip-flops-upholstery-foam-plastic-and-sofas-the-surprising-catches-guanabara-bay-fishers-are-making","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.circularactionhub.org\/flip-flops-upholstery-foam-plastic-and-sofas-the-surprising-catches-guanabara-bay-fishers-are-making\/","title":{"rendered":"Flip-flops, upholstery foam, plastic and sofas – the surprising catches Guanabara Bay fishers are making"},"content":{"rendered":"
Since April this year, the second phase of our ‘Fishing for litter’ project has been supporting 25 families from Ilha do Governador, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to remove waste from Guanabara Bay. To show the development of this social and environmental work, we will publish a series of articles containing further details of, and stories from this initiative. In this first piece, we will look at how much waste and what kind of materials have been ‘caught’ so far.<\/strong><\/p>\n “Virtually, you can’t catch any fish from the sea. The fishers go out and, when they are back, they can’t even pay for the boats’ fuel costs. The project is providing a vital livelihood for them because, in addition to the environmental benefits, it has a significant social component.” <\/i><\/p>\n Pedro Succar, BVRio circular economy specialist<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n By the start of August, four months had passed since the beginning of the second phase of the project ‘Fishing for litter in Guanabara Bay’, carried out by BVRio<\/a> in partnership with the Italian social enterprise Ogyre<\/span><\/a>. Designed to last 12 months, the fishers have collected more than half of the established solid waste target for this project phase: almost 53 tonnes of the 100-tonne target have already been removed from the sea and mangroves (graph 1). Twice a week, 20 fishers leave early in the morning in 10 of their traditional fishing boats and return around lunchtime, having collected an average of 1,374 kg per day, 38% over the target.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/h4>\n