( May 16, 2012) Caritas Pakistan Karachi on Tuesday launched a solid waste management
system in the country’s most populous city – Karachi, to promote recycling. The project
includes forming environmental protection groups in slums, appointing garbage collectors,
distributing more than a thousand dustbins and eight wheelbarrows to collect the garbage
in a city that produces about 9,000 tons of solid waste each day, according to Dominic
Gill, executive secretary of Caritas Pakistan Karachi (CPK). “Less than 50 percent
is dumped into open landfills, while the rest is left unattended. Slums on the outskirts
suffer the most,” Gill said at the handing over of 150 dustbins among 75 families
at Saif-ul-Marri Goth, 60 kilometers from Karachi. The project is being administered
by a livelihood program at CPK that has already implemented initiatives on kitchen
gardening, tree plantation and the use of more fuel efficient stoves in the area.
“Each family will pay 30 rupees [approximately US$ 0.33] for the salary of garbage
collectors. Future plans include teaching them the converting of waste into soil fertilizers
and encouraging recycling,” said Mansha Noor, Caritas’ livelihood program coordinator.