From once an air-conditioned office, Stella Mokone, a single mother of three in Botswana, found herself scavenging for empty soft drink cans on the streets to make ends meet. “It was a tough decision to start picking up empty tins in beer halls and on the streets, but it is worth it,” she said.
GABORONE, Aug. 31 (Xinhua) — Stella Mokone, a single mother of three in Francistown, Botswana’s second-largest city, felt like the world had come crashing down on her when she found herself jobless after her employer closed shop in 2021.
Mokone then turned to picking and selling garbage because of the burden of caring for her children — two boys and a girl. She is also responsible for buying food and paying utilities such as electricity and water for her aging parents.
From once an air-conditioned office, Mokone found herself scavenging for empty soft drink cans on the streets to make ends meet. “It was a tough decision to start picking up empty tins in beer halls and on the streets, but it is worth it,” said Mokone, 37, as she trudged from one trash can to another, looking for empty cans in the scorching sun.
Mokone is not the only one who has discovered the money in waste. Across the southern African country, recycling trash by picking it up and selling it has become a booming business.
According to Philip Sandawana, a district environment coordinator in Botswana’s Ministry of Environment and Tourism, the number of individuals and organizations collecting waste for recycling has quadrupled in recent years.
According to the ministry’s website, the number of recycling organizations increased from 80 in 2017 to 210 in 2023 as locals are lured by cash incentives to deal with trash. In response to the increased supply of plastic waste waiting to be sold and the opportunity to sell new commodities made from low-cost materials, plastic recycling companies, which buy and process the waste, also increased their presence from 49 in 2019 to 77 countrywide in 2023.
“Recycling has of late been a lucrative venture for many in the country, from the waste pickers to recycling companies,” said Sandawana.
Botswana struggles with the plastic waste found in rivers, streets, and open areas. In cities and towns, uncollected plastic waste is a contributor to water and air pollution, as locals and waste incinerators burn plastic waste at dumpsites.
The waste also clogs sewers, causes sewer lines to burst, and spills into freshwater ecosystems. This waste later breaks down into microplastics, which are found in soil, sediments, streams, and lakes. Microplastics can also enter the human diet by moving up the food chain through marine animals that people consume.
The southern African country generates at least 1.6 million metric tons of waste annually, according to a 2022 survey by the University of Botswana to establish the extent of harmful waste in the environment. Of this waste, 16 percent is plastic.