Pakistan has the second largest domestic market for plastics in Southeast Asia after India that is growing at an annual average rate of 15 percent; revealed by the speakers at two consultative workshops arranged by the WWF-Pakistan in collaboration with the Coca-Cola Foundation.
WWF-Pakistan is conducting a scoping study on the consumption, collection and disposal pattern of PET bottles and quantifying the amount of PET being recycled, while also analyzing the level of public awareness about plastic pollution. Globally 8 million tons of plastic is disposed in the oceans annually.
WWF-Pakistan, in collaboration with The Coca-Cola Foundation, has formally reached out to waste dealers and scavengers for the very first time, with an inclusive approach to facilitate key stakeholders in creating a "Pakistan without Waste" - a sustainable packaging vision of The Coca-Cola Company.
In pursuance of this study, two interactive stakeholder consultative workshops were held in Lahore and Karachi this week, aiming at building cohesion amongst the scavengers, junk dealers and recyclers (informal sector) and the formal sector, to identify gaps, enhance collection and recycling efficiency. This series of workshops will also create awareness on the issue of plastic pollution amongst communities and educational institutes.
"Coca-Cola led the industry by announcing a bold and ambitious goal to globally recycle each and every bottle it produces by the year 2030. Although it may sound impossible right now, but we have certainly taken a step forward in the right direction by firstly acknowledging packaging waste as a problem and establishing partnerships to harvest a permanent solution for this important societal issue," stated Rizwan Khan, General Manager, Coca-Cola Pakistan & Afghanistan Region.
"These workshops will be held across nine cities that are part of the waste assessment study to identify the loopholes in our existing policies and frameworks," he added.
At the workshop, Dr Masood Arshad, Director Climate, Energy and Water, WWF-Pakistan said, "It's crucial to start focusing on post-consumer packaging and recycling. Therefore, it's immensely important for companies in the public sector, private sector, formal and informal waste sector to collaborate and work together in pursuance of this aim, and the first step should be to assess the scope of our problem for which we are already holding an assessment study which shall be made public in August 2019."
Nazifa Butt, Manager Environmental Assessment/ Project lead, WWF-Pakistan, shared her dedicated work on healthy and plastic free oceans. Speaking on the occasion, The Coca-Cola Company's representative, Natasha Haroon, briefed the audience about Coca-Cola's World Without Waste Programme and highlighted the company's global recycling practices. Research findings and the role of each stakeholder was also shared amongst the participants, by WWF-Pakistan.
The session concluded on a discussion with junk dealers and scavengers to understand their concerns and establish action items for the next step in developing relations with them.
During the panel discussion, all stakeholders agreed on the point of collaboration if the resources are provided, PET supply is continuous, availability of transport is assured, their responsibilities are defined and management plan is delineated, the goals of circular economy can be met.
They also discussed innovations in PET recycling, health of scavengers impacted by garbage picking, and behavioural change with respect to source segregation aiding in increasing PET recycling. The dialogue also revolved around reducing plastics by involving all sectors, citizens as well as scavengers to engage them and lift them out of poverty.
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