Participants
of the Msasani Beach Clean up and Anza up-cycling event looking at
some of the products made from waste materials during the event at the
Msasani Bonde la Mpunga beach over the weekend.
Participants
of the Msasani Beach Clean up and Anza up-cycling event looking at
some of the products made by Wonder Welders workshop from waste
materials during the event at the Msasani Bonde la Mpunga beach over
the weekend.
Participants
of the Msasani Beach Clean up and Anza up-cycling event collecting
waste from the Msasani Bonde la Mpunga beach in Dar es salaam over the
weekend.
By
Our Staff Writer
Dar es Salaam residents have been challenged to creatively recycle trash
materials and convert them into new materials or products of higher
value and quality - which would lead to economic empowerment while
giving waste materials a new purpose and most importantly avoiding
adding them to landfill.
Sarah
Scott, the CEO of Archipelago Productions, organizers of the Msasani
Beach Clean Up and Anza Up-cycle Fiesta which took place at Msasani
Beach in Dar es Salaam over the weekend said during the event that waste
products can be turned into treasure and people can make money from it
while keeping the environment clean at the same time.
Scott, who has been instrumental in the cleanup of the Msasani
beachfront, says there is a lot of trash on this beach that can’t be
reused but there are a lot of objects in the streets that can be reused.
The
Archipelago, the Anza magazine in collaboration with the Msasani Bonde
la Mpunga community
“This is a continuation on our monthly beach clean ups on Msasani beach.
Archipelago and Anza magazine have collaborated to bring the community
together for a day of cleaning, fun, music and up-cycling.
We
hope to inspire the community to keep their environment clean” said
Scott.
According to Scott, the event was designed to promote the up-cycling
initiatives in Tanzania and it is also a platform for upcyclers to
showcase, promote and sell their work and to open people’s eyes to all
the possibilities that up-cycling brings.
The
common denominator is that we make things from consumer recycled
material, or what we lovingly call trash. If we want to succeed in
closing the loops and creating a truly circular economy, we need to
change the common perception that goods made from recycled materials are
always a downgrade on what was recycled to make them, and suitable only
for low-value applications.
We
need to think of how waste materials can be recycled, showing that you
can take trash and create items that are higher value, higher
performance and desirable for consumers.
Msasani
Beach Clean Up and Anza Up-cycle Fiesta was organized by Archipelago
and sponsored by Coca Cola, Anza Magazine, Regent Tanzania, Knight
Support, The Recycle, Impact Promotions, Hugo Domingo and Techno Brain.
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