A recent article discussing India’s inadequate waste disposal problems presents an organization that has been active in this space since 1998. NGO Conserve India addresses such issues by transforming waste into handmade recycled plastic, which is then made into bags and accessories. The process undertaken is both energy-efficient and environmentally friendly.
Like
many of the world's developing countries, India suffers from a waste
disposal problem. This issue made headlines a few months ago when
workers and waste collectors were accidentally exposed to radiation
emanating from toxic waste in Delhi. Thus far, no policy has been
adopted to confront the ever-increasing mounds of often hazardous
garbage accumulating in and around India's urban areas. Instead, India
has been satisfied to let its informal economy address this problem.
It is estimated that India is home to over one million people who earn
a livelihood picking through massive informal garbage dumps and selling
anything of value that they find. Exposed to all manner of toxic
chemicals and poisons, these aptly-dubbed "rag-pickers" work through
the night, sleeping next to trash heaps when exhaustion finally
overtakes them. According to a study by the Stree Mukti Sangathan, 85
percent of rag-pickers in Mumbai are women, ten percent are men and
five percent are children. A shocking 98 percent are illiterate, a grim
confirmation that these people have been ignored and forgotten by a
government that lacks the infrastructure to clean up after itself.
Conserve India, launched in 1998 by husband and wife
Shalabh and Anita Ahuja, is a non-governmental organization that seeks
to "reduce India's mountain of waste, improve energy efficiency, and
help some of Delhi's poorest out of the city's slums," according to the
organization's website. Conserve India utilizes an innovative upcycling
(as opposed to recycling) technique. The organization takes discarded
waste - polythene bags, rubber from old truck tires, saris and old
denims - to create Handmade Recycled Plastic (RHP). RHP is used to make
fashion forward bags and accessories through a process developed
specifically to be optimally energy efficient and eliminate the use of
polluting dyes and chemicals.
While pursuing its environmental objectives through upcycling, Conserve
India pursues a third bottom-line by giving rag-pickers the tools they
require to improve their lives and support their families. The average
rag-picker on India's streets manages to earn around $25 a month, while
a rag-picker who collects waste for Conserve India earns around $70 a
month - a near three-fold increase. Furthermore, Conserve India uses
its resources to bring attention to the plight of India's rag-pickers.
For example, the organization started Recognition for Ragpickers, a
campaign that is lobbying Delhi's government to create an official
register for the city's some 150,000 rag-pickers and grant them the
right to obtain a fair wage for their essential service. The
organization also provides training to its employees and supports
schools in the slums in which many of its employees live.
http://www.thinkindia.net.in/2010/08/triple-bottom-line-social-enterprise-tackles-indias-waste-disposal-crisis-.html