Indian Fishermen Take Plastic Out of the Sea and Use It to Build Roads
Every one of India’s 1.3 billion
people uses an average 11kg of plastic each year. After being used, much of
this plastic finds its way to the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean, where it can
maim and kill fish, birds and other marine wildlife.
Fisherman in India’s southern
state of Kerala are taking on the battle to cut the level of plastic waste in
the oceans. When the trawlers drag their nets
through the water, they end up scooping out huge amounts of plastic along with
the fish. Until recently the fishermen would simply throw the plastic junk back
into the water.
But last summer Kerala’s
fisheries minister J. Mercykutty Amma started a scheme to change this. Under
her direction, the state government launched a campaign called Suchitwa
Sagaram, or Clean Sea, which trains fishermen to collect the plastic and bring
it back to shore. In Suchitwa Sagaram’s first 10
months, fisherman have removed 25 tonnes of plastic from the Arabian Sean,
including 10 tonnes of plastic bags and bottles, according to a UN report on
the scheme.
Once all the plastic waste caught
by the Keralan fishermen reaches the shore, it is collected by people from the
local fishing community - all but two of whom are women - and fed into a
plastic shredding machine. Like so many of India’s plastic
recycling schemes, this shredded plastic is converted into material that is
used for road surfacing.
There are more than 34,000km of
plastic roads in India, mostly in rural areas. More than half of the roads in
the southern state of Tamil Nadu are plastic. This road surface is increasingly
popular as it makes the roads more resilient to India’s searing heat. The
melting point for plastic roads is around 66°C, compared to 50°C for
conventional roads.
Using recycled plastic is a
cheaper alternative to conventional plastic additives for road surfaces. Every
kilometre of plastic road uses the equivalent of a million plastic bags, saving
around one tonne of asphalt. Each kilometre costs roughly 8% less than a
conventional road.
And plastic roads help create
work. As well as the Keralan fishing crews, teams of on-land plastic pickers
across India collect the plastic waste. They sell their plastic to the many
small plastic shredding businesses that have popped up across the country.

Comments
Post a Comment