logo
Zimbabwe's scrap metal hunters quietly fight climate change, one piece at a time

Zimbabwe's scrap metal hunters quietly fight climate change, one piece at a time

The Star2 days ago
"Any gold in there today?' Ezekiel Mabhiza called to a man hunched over a mound of trash, hoe in hand, rummaging through one of the many illegal dumpsites that scar Zimbabwe's capital.
Mabhiza joined in. For the next several hours, he scoured the sites around Harare, using a stick or his bare hands to sift through piles of filth, from discarded diapers to broken appliances.
By midday, his pushcart was full. Springs from old mattresses, car parts, tin cans - it all added up to 66kg of salvaged metal.
The haul earned him US$8 (RM34). It's enough to feed his five children for the day, maybe even cover a utility bill in a country where the majority of people survive through informal work.
Scrap metal collectors move a piece.
"I have given up looking for a formal job,' the 36-year-old said. "You walk the industrial areas all day and come back with nothing. This is my job now. I pay rent, my children eat and go to school.'
Across Harare, thousands like Mabhiza live off scrap metal. Quietly, they are helping to sustain a cleaner environment and combat climate change.
Making steel relies heavily on burning highly polluting coal, and the industry accounts for nearly 8% of the carbon dioxide emissions that come from the energy sector and contribute to Earth's warming, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD.
It takes less energy to turn scrap metal into new steel, so the pickers are helping reduce carbon emissions with their work in addition to cleaning up metals that would otherwise pollute the city.
Workers load scrap metal onto a waiting truck to recycle at a collection site.
Harare generates about 1,000 tons (907 metric tonnes) of waste every day, most of which goes uncollected, according to the city council. People and companies frustrated with erratic collection dump trash on roadsides and open spaces.They sometimes burn it. Once-pristine neighborhoods have become polluted eyesores.
A new system
Recently, the city council partnered with a green energy waste management company to improve collection amid contested accusations of corruption. But for now, informal pickers like Mabhiza remain indispensable.
"It's a dirty job, yes, but people rarely understand how important it is,' said Fungai Mataga, who runs a scrap metal collection center where Mabhiza and others sell their finds. "They are society's cleaning crew. Every piece of metal they bring here is one less item polluting our land.'
A man rearranges scrap metal at a collection site.
Globally, this kind of scrap metal is vital to the steel industry, accounting for roughly a third of metallic raw materials used in steel production, according to the OECD.
With growing concerns over the environmental impact of mining and rising interest in circular economies, demand for recycled materials is increasing.
Informal pickers are the "unsung heroes,' said Joyce Machiri, head of the mining and extractives program at the Zimbabwe Environmental Lawyers Association.
"When you look at scrap, no one would actually say, 'Wow, this a good job.' But look at it this way, these are some of the green jobs we are talking about,' Machiri said.
Many steelmakers cannot afford to invest in new, cleaner technologies. That makes scrap recycling a critical – and accessible – alternative.
Scrap metal collectors weigh a piece.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency estimates that recycling steel and tin cans saves 60% to 74% of the energy required to produce them from raw materials.
Although there are no official statistics on the number of scrap metal collectors in Zimbabwe due to the informal nature of their work, they are unmistakable.
Selling scrap
In Hopley, a poor township in Harare, they streamed into a dusty open lot where they sell their scrap. Some pushed carts.Others carried sacks on their heads. One woman brought a small plastic bag with just enough metal to earn a few cents to buy vegetables for dinner.
Inside the yard, heaps of junk like old fridges, microwaves, cups, water heater tanks, generators and car engines were weighed on a giant old scale. Workers handed out cash and loaded the metal onto a 30-ton (27.2 metric tonne) truck destined for a steelmaker that will buy it for between US$220 (RM937) and US$260 (RM1107) a ton.
Men scrounge for scrap metal.
Factories in the southern African country of 16 million people consume about 600,000 tons (544,310 metric tonnes) of scrap metal annually, all locally collected, said Dosman Mangisi, chief operations officer of the Zimbabwe Institute of Foundries, an association of metal casting businesses.
The job of hunting scrap metal is gruelling and hazardous.
Hunters rise before dawn, walking kilometres to scavenge from landfills, industrial zones, homes and roadside dumps. Some sleep near illegal dumpsites, waiting for trucks that unload waste overnight to avoid arrest.
"I have been lucky not to fall sick,' said Lovemore Sibanda, a security guard who collects scrap on his days off. "But I am always worried. I hope I can afford gloves one day.'
Metal hunters such as Mabhiza and Sibanda have seen it all, from medical waste such as syringes and expired medicines to rotting carcasses of pets such as dogs and cats thrown away by their owners.
"At first, I would lose my appetite for days after seeing things like that,' said Sibanda. "Now, I am used to it. This is my office. This is where the money is.' – By FARAI MUTSAKA/AP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Plastic pollution plagues Asia
Plastic pollution plagues Asia

New Straits Times

timea day ago

  • New Straits Times

Plastic pollution plagues Asia

KULSUM Beghum sorts waste at a landfill in Dhaka. Her blood contains 650 microplastic particles per millilitre, according to an analysis funded by a waste picker s' union. "Plastic is not good for me," she said through a translator during an interview in Geneva, where she came to bear witness on the sidelines of 184-nation talks to forge the world's first global plastic pollution treaty. "It started 30 years ago" in the Bangladeshi capital, said the 55-year-old, supported by her union. At first, "plastic was for cooking oil and soft drinks", she recalled. Then came shopping bags, which replaced traditional jute bags. "We were attracted to plastic, it was so beautiful!" Today, in one of the most economically fragile countries on the planet, plastic is everywhere: lining the streets, strewn across beaches, clogging the drains. Beghum wants non-recyclable plastics banned, pointing out that she cannot resell them and they have no market value. "No one collects them." Indumathi from Bangalore in southern India, who did not give her full name, concurs: 60 per cent of the plastic waste that arrives at the sorting centre she set up is non-recyclable. This includes crisp packets made of a mixture of aluminium and plastic, and other products using "multi-layer " plas tic. "No one picks them up from the streets and there are a lot of them," she said. Scientists attending the treaty negotiations at the United Nations in Geneva back her up. "Multi-layer plastic bags are a disaster for the environment," said Stephanie Reynaud, a polymer chemistry researcher at France's National Centre for Scientific Research. "They cannot be recycled." Indamathi was also critical of what she described as public policy failures. After single-use bags were banned in her country in 2014, for example, she saw the arrival of black or transparent polypropylene lunchboxes, which are also single-use. "We 're seeing more and more of them on the streets and in landfills. They've replaced shopping bag s," she said. According to a recent Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development report on plastic in Southeast Asia, "more ambitious public policies could reduce waste by more than 95 per cent by 2050" in the region, where plastic consumption increased ninefold since 1990 to 152 million tonnes in 2022. Consumer demand is not to blame, argues Seema Prabhu of the Swiss-based non-g overnmental organisation (NGO) Trash Heroes, which works mainly in Southeast Asian countries. The market has been flooded with single-use plastic replacing traditional items in Asia, such as banana leaf packaging in Thailand and Indonesia, and metal lunch boxes in India. "It's a new colonialism that is eroding traditional cultures." According to her, more jobs could be created "in a reuse economy than in a single-use economy ". Single-dose "s achet s" of shampoo, laundry detergent or sauces were a scourge, said Yuyun Ismawati Drwiega, an Indonesian who co-chairs the International Pollutants Elimination Network NG O. "They are the smallest plastic items with which the industry has poisoned us — easy to carry, easy to obtain; every kiosk sells them." In Indonesia, collection and sorting centres specialising in sachets have failed to stem the tide, mostly shutting down not long after opening. In Bali, where Ismawati Drwiega lives, she organises guided tours that she has nicknamed "Beauty and the Beast". The beauty is the beaches and luxury hotels; the beast is the back streets, the tofu factories that use plastic briquettes as fuel, and the rubbish dumps. The writer is from AFP

Zimbabwe's scrap metal hunters quietly fight climate change, one piece at a time
Zimbabwe's scrap metal hunters quietly fight climate change, one piece at a time

The Star

time2 days ago

  • The Star

Zimbabwe's scrap metal hunters quietly fight climate change, one piece at a time

"Any gold in there today?' Ezekiel Mabhiza called to a man hunched over a mound of trash, hoe in hand, rummaging through one of the many illegal dumpsites that scar Zimbabwe's capital. Mabhiza joined in. For the next several hours, he scoured the sites around Harare, using a stick or his bare hands to sift through piles of filth, from discarded diapers to broken appliances. By midday, his pushcart was full. Springs from old mattresses, car parts, tin cans - it all added up to 66kg of salvaged metal. The haul earned him US$8 (RM34). It's enough to feed his five children for the day, maybe even cover a utility bill in a country where the majority of people survive through informal work. Scrap metal collectors move a piece. "I have given up looking for a formal job,' the 36-year-old said. "You walk the industrial areas all day and come back with nothing. This is my job now. I pay rent, my children eat and go to school.' Across Harare, thousands like Mabhiza live off scrap metal. Quietly, they are helping to sustain a cleaner environment and combat climate change. Making steel relies heavily on burning highly polluting coal, and the industry accounts for nearly 8% of the carbon dioxide emissions that come from the energy sector and contribute to Earth's warming, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD. It takes less energy to turn scrap metal into new steel, so the pickers are helping reduce carbon emissions with their work in addition to cleaning up metals that would otherwise pollute the city. Workers load scrap metal onto a waiting truck to recycle at a collection site. Harare generates about 1,000 tons (907 metric tonnes) of waste every day, most of which goes uncollected, according to the city council. People and companies frustrated with erratic collection dump trash on roadsides and open sometimes burn it. Once-pristine neighborhoods have become polluted eyesores. A new system Recently, the city council partnered with a green energy waste management company to improve collection amid contested accusations of corruption. But for now, informal pickers like Mabhiza remain indispensable. "It's a dirty job, yes, but people rarely understand how important it is,' said Fungai Mataga, who runs a scrap metal collection center where Mabhiza and others sell their finds. "They are society's cleaning crew. Every piece of metal they bring here is one less item polluting our land.' A man rearranges scrap metal at a collection site. Globally, this kind of scrap metal is vital to the steel industry, accounting for roughly a third of metallic raw materials used in steel production, according to the OECD. With growing concerns over the environmental impact of mining and rising interest in circular economies, demand for recycled materials is increasing. Informal pickers are the "unsung heroes,' said Joyce Machiri, head of the mining and extractives program at the Zimbabwe Environmental Lawyers Association. "When you look at scrap, no one would actually say, 'Wow, this a good job.' But look at it this way, these are some of the green jobs we are talking about,' Machiri said. Many steelmakers cannot afford to invest in new, cleaner technologies. That makes scrap recycling a critical – and accessible – alternative. Scrap metal collectors weigh a piece. The United States Environmental Protection Agency estimates that recycling steel and tin cans saves 60% to 74% of the energy required to produce them from raw materials. Although there are no official statistics on the number of scrap metal collectors in Zimbabwe due to the informal nature of their work, they are unmistakable. Selling scrap In Hopley, a poor township in Harare, they streamed into a dusty open lot where they sell their scrap. Some pushed carried sacks on their heads. One woman brought a small plastic bag with just enough metal to earn a few cents to buy vegetables for dinner. Inside the yard, heaps of junk like old fridges, microwaves, cups, water heater tanks, generators and car engines were weighed on a giant old scale. Workers handed out cash and loaded the metal onto a 30-ton (27.2 metric tonne) truck destined for a steelmaker that will buy it for between US$220 (RM937) and US$260 (RM1107) a ton. Men scrounge for scrap metal. Factories in the southern African country of 16 million people consume about 600,000 tons (544,310 metric tonnes) of scrap metal annually, all locally collected, said Dosman Mangisi, chief operations officer of the Zimbabwe Institute of Foundries, an association of metal casting businesses. The job of hunting scrap metal is gruelling and hazardous. Hunters rise before dawn, walking kilometres to scavenge from landfills, industrial zones, homes and roadside dumps. Some sleep near illegal dumpsites, waiting for trucks that unload waste overnight to avoid arrest. "I have been lucky not to fall sick,' said Lovemore Sibanda, a security guard who collects scrap on his days off. "But I am always worried. I hope I can afford gloves one day.' Metal hunters such as Mabhiza and Sibanda have seen it all, from medical waste such as syringes and expired medicines to rotting carcasses of pets such as dogs and cats thrown away by their owners. "At first, I would lose my appetite for days after seeing things like that,' said Sibanda. "Now, I am used to it. This is my office. This is where the money is.' – By FARAI MUTSAKA/AP

Myanmar's Rakhine state plunges into hunger crisis amid raging civil conflict
Myanmar's Rakhine state plunges into hunger crisis amid raging civil conflict

The Star

time2 days ago

  • The Star

Myanmar's Rakhine state plunges into hunger crisis amid raging civil conflict

According to WFP, the number of families unable to afford basic needs such as food has reached 57 per cent in Rakhine, up from 33 per cent last December. - WFP/Bernama PHNOM PENH: Half of the population of Rakhine State in Myanmar is facing severe food shortages due to an ongoing civil conflict. The World Food Programme (WFP) has made an urgent call to the global community for increased humanitarian assistance. WFP said a combination of conflict, blockades, and funding cuts is driving a dramatic rise in hunger and malnutrition. "People are trapped in a vicious cycle, cut off by conflict, stripped of livelihoods, and left with no humanitarian safety net. "We are hearing heartbreaking stories of children crying from hunger and mothers skipping meals. "Families are doing everything they can, but they cannot survive this alone,' WFP Representative and Country Director in Myanmar Michael Dunford said in a press statement. The western state with a population of about three million has been mired in the bloody conflict for years. A military coup in February 2021 only exacerbated the situation. Rakhine, bordering Bangladesh, has also been caught in sectarian violence which has caused the displacemtn of its Rohingya minority. According to WFP, the number of families unable to afford basic needs such as food has reached 57 per cent in Rakhine, up from 33 per cent last December. Families have resorted to desperate measures to survive, such as taking on mounting debts and begging. The conflict has also given rise to domestic violence, school dropouts, social tensions, and human trafficking. The hunger crisis is caused by the prolonged conflict, severe movement restrictions, soaring food prices, and the reduction of support following a slash in humanitarian funding, said WFP. "Without urgent action, this crisis will spiral into a full-blown disaster. The world must not look away,' said Dunford. The global agency requires RM126 million (US$30 million) to assist 270,000 people in Rakhine over the next six months. The ongoing civil war between the military and various ethnic groups continues to destabilise the Southeast Asian nation of nearly 50 million people. - Bernama

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store