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Village community project trades plastic waste for rice

A new community program in the Philippines is attacking two of the villageā€™s most serious issues: hunger and the plastic waste on the streets. Village leaders in Bayanan launched a program which offers 1 kilogram of rice in exchange for 2 kilograms of plastic waste.

Reports say that the Southeast Asian country is among one of the worldā€™s top contributors of marine pollution, secondary only to Indonesia and China. According to a 2015 study fromĀ the Ocean Conservancy, the country generates more than 2.7 million tonnes of plastic waste every year, 20% of which leaks into the oceans.

ā€œThe Philippine government has adopted a number of laws needed to help mitigate solid waste,ā€ said the organization. ā€œThe problem is these laws and product bans donā€™t work well if community members donā€™t understand the consequences of their actions or know why these policies were designed.ā€

The program in Bayanan has addressed this exact problem by incentivizing the villagers to keep their streets clean in exchange for money saved on one of their most commonly consumed foods.

Village chief Andor San Pedro told reporters that the program organizers were able to collect more than 214 kilograms (471 pounds) of plastic and recyclables during the month of August, all of which was sent to government facilities for processing.

The organizers now hope that the programā€™s success will inspire other villages to adopt similar initiatives in their own communities.

GNN

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