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Tunisia recyclers struggle to tackle mountains of waste

AFP . Mghira
20 Dec 2021 00:00:00 | Update: 20 Dec 2021 01:29:08
Tunisia recyclers struggle to tackle mountains of waste
Employees of AFREC African Recycling, transport bags of plastic waste at the recycling facility in the industrial zone of Mghira – AFP Photo

"When I see plastic, I see money," says Tarek Masmoudi, owner of one of the few recycling companies in Tunisia, where a waste crisis is threatening widespread social unrest

Recycling is almost non-existent in the North African country, which produces 2.6 million tonnes of waste each year.

Some 85 percent of that ends up in landfills, while much of the rest winds up in informal dumps, says Tunisian waste management expert Walim Merdaci. 

But with many facilities close to overflowing and neighbouring communities up in arms, the crisis is already stoking tensions.

In November, a man died as security forces fired tear gas to disperse protesters demanding the closure of a stinking landfill they say has spread deadly diseases and health problems to their town of Agareb, near second city Sfax.

That could be a worrying sign of things to come as, according to expert Wassim Chaabane, most of the country's 11 official dumping grounds are due to close by the end of 2022.

That has authorities scrambling to find new sites. In the capital Tunis, home to about 2.7 million people, the situation is particularly urgent.

The Bordj Chakir dump, Tunisia's biggest, receives more than 3,000 tonnes of rubbish a day and is close to overflowing.

From waste to wealth

But where others see a crisis, Masmoudi sees an opportunity.

Every day, a steady stream of minivans and small trucks bring to his facility in Mghira, near Tunis, bales of plastic waste to be weighed, sorted and cut into fine chips for industrial use.

Much is collected by hand from the streets and bins of the capital by "barbechas", informal waste pickers.

Masmoudi's firm African Recycling deals with 6,000 tonnes of waste a year.

The 42-year-old directly employs around 60 people, many of them women, and indirectly provides work to roughly 200 -- no small achievement in a country suffering 18 percent unemployment.

Between four and seven percent of Tunisia's waste is recycled, according to official figures.

But Masmoudi, standing by his sleek white four-wheel-drive, said the waste market was growing fast.

"Recycling is a sector where a lot remains to be done, but which could create jobs and wealth in Tunisia."

The situation is similar in neighbouring Algeria, where experts say as much as 60 percent of household waste from the country's 43 million population goes to unregulated dumps.

Samira Hamidi, a member of Algeria's semi-independent advisory body CNESE, says "less than seven percent of waste is recycled".

Just 5,000 people are employed in Algeria's recycling sector, according to official figures. 

In Tunisia, after a decade of political paralysis since a 2011 revolution, Masmoudi says the waste management system reflects a lack of strategy and vision.

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