Berliner Boersenzeitung - Mongolians fight plastic pollution in vast steppe

EUR -
AED 4.074348
AFN 78.016446
ALL 99.632691
AMD 430.125276
ANG 2.001452
AOA 1022.185011
ARS 1059.19379
AUD 1.663304
AWG 1.996663
AZN 1.890141
BAM 1.95546
BBD 2.24231
BDT 132.706945
BGN 1.95546
BHD 0.417727
BIF 3207.842712
BMD 1.109257
BND 1.442349
BOB 7.673667
BRL 6.209738
BSD 1.110507
BTN 93.299791
BWP 14.748438
BYN 3.634369
BYR 21741.442931
BZD 2.238511
CAD 1.506205
CDF 3153.618884
CHF 0.935032
CLF 0.037926
CLP 1046.498195
CNY 7.863419
CNH 7.869682
COP 4622.996862
CRC 583.298665
CUC 1.109257
CUP 29.395318
CVE 110.245847
CZK 25.053246
DJF 197.765643
DKK 7.467192
DOP 66.448456
DZD 146.879483
EGP 53.689673
ERN 16.638859
ETB 127.467256
FJD 2.461225
FKP 0.86358
GBP 0.84473
GEL 2.984335
GGP 0.86358
GHS 17.401977
GIP 0.86358
GMD 77.648405
GNF 9597.332687
GTQ 8.591507
GYD 232.349635
HKD 8.646827
HNL 27.519219
HRK 7.618478
HTG 146.624527
HUF 394.086268
IDR 17147.398392
ILS 4.13438
IMP 0.86358
INR 93.164136
IQD 1454.847254
IRR 46705.278687
ISK 152.600954
JEP 0.86358
JMD 174.369707
JOD 0.786135
JPY 157.897273
KES 142.98516
KGS 93.403678
KHR 4524.214023
KMF 493.069075
KPW 998.331474
KRW 1485.040811
KWD 0.338779
KYD 0.925439
KZT 532.537484
LAK 24532.738008
LBP 99450.422807
LKR 331.782361
LRD 216.562377
LSL 19.696178
LTL 3.275349
LVL 0.670979
LYD 5.287081
MAD 10.781927
MDL 19.323643
MGA 5045.123527
MKD 61.524312
MMK 3602.824416
MNT 3769.255622
MOP 8.914251
MRU 43.799391
MUR 50.981885
MVR 17.027519
MWK 1925.765443
MXN 22.165457
MYR 4.803643
MZN 70.853853
NAD 19.696178
NGN 1780.535853
NIO 40.882898
NOK 11.888077
NPR 149.280066
NZD 1.796514
OMR 0.426676
PAB 1.110507
PEN 4.212368
PGK 4.396236
PHP 61.830417
PKR 309.345658
PLN 4.285893
PYG 8578.509684
QAR 4.047997
RON 4.974801
RSD 117.007673
RUB 99.832656
RWF 1492.140775
SAR 4.164333
SBD 9.259888
SCR 15.236253
SDG 667.222339
SEK 11.428845
SGD 1.446143
SHP 0.86358
SLE 25.343537
SLL 23260.535519
SOS 634.689737
SRD 32.153491
STD 22959.386371
SVC 9.717312
SYP 2787.04244
SZL 19.690579
THB 37.43082
TJS 11.827445
TMT 3.893493
TND 3.371114
TOP 2.599771
TRY 37.601053
TTD 7.526692
TWD 35.541495
TZS 3020.675228
UAH 45.516193
UGX 4125.283328
USD 1.109257
UYU 44.852208
UZS 14112.548274
VEF 4018342.815906
VES 40.653047
VND 27304.368252
VUV 131.69322
WST 3.106944
XAF 655.843063
XAG 0.03972
XAU 0.000444
XCD 2.997824
XDR 0.824757
XOF 655.843063
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.702966
ZAR 19.802451
ZMK 9984.650719
ZMW 29.179931
ZWL 357.180396
  • SCS

    -0.6100

    13.23

    -4.61%

  • NGG

    -0.3700

    67.62

    -0.55%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    46.2

    +0.67%

  • GSK

    0.5400

    43.67

    +1.24%

  • RBGPF

    58.7100

    58.71

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    6.07

    -0.49%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    25.02

    +0.24%

  • AZN

    0.0500

    83.05

    +0.06%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    25.04

    +0.4%

  • RIO

    -0.6800

    59.71

    -1.14%

  • BCC

    -0.6600

    124.13

    -0.53%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    35.75

    -0.56%

  • VOD

    -0.2200

    9.97

    -2.21%

  • BP

    -0.4500

    31.9

    -1.41%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.12

    +0.23%

  • BTI

    0.3200

    38.61

    +0.83%

Mongolians fight plastic pollution in vast steppe
Mongolians fight plastic pollution in vast steppe / Photo: Hector RETAMAL - AFP

Mongolians fight plastic pollution in vast steppe

Mongolian herder Purev Batmunkh sighs as he picks through waste strewn across a field -- the refuse of an unsightly and deadly waste pollution problem affecting swathes of the steppe.

Text size:

His country is among the world's top per capita producers of plastic waste, and without a centralised recycling programme, campaigners say some 90 percent of it ends up in landfills.

"Most people live in the moment and they don't really think about the future and just throw their garbage," Batmunkh told AFP in the Khishig-Undur district of Mongolia's northern Bulgan province.

"They don't know how long this garbage will stay, for how many years."

Illegal dumping is common and some of it then blows into pastoral lands, where it is eaten by livestock.

Batmunkh said one of his cows had been "drooling and could not really move".

"A few days passed and it died," he said.

"We gutted the cow and we found that all the way from its neck to its intestines and bladder, there was a plastic raincoat inside it."

Mongolia introduced a ban on single-use plastic bags in 2019.

But in the steppe, it appears to have had little effect.

In a nearby field, a mountain of multicoloured plastic waste, from fizzy drink bottles to tyres and shopping bags, lies festering just a few metres from where the horses graze.

- 'Zero-waste' -

Annual plastics production worldwide has more than doubled in 20 years to 460 million tonnes, and is on track to triple within four decades if left unchecked.

Only nine percent is recycled, and according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, its contribution to global warming could more than double by 2060 -- having accounted for 3.4 percent of global emissions in 2019.

But, in rural Mongolia, some are trying to help.

Since 2018, local NGO Ecosoum has organised one of the area's first recycling facilities -- encouraging herders and others to pick up local waste and bring it to them for processing.

Partially funded by the European Union, it is seeking to turn Khishig-Undur into Mongolia's first "zero-waste" district.

"These kinds of plastics are all over Mongolia," Batkhuyag Naranbat, technical coordinator at the recycling facility, told AFP, columns of processed bottles piled high behind him.

"Livestock go out and eat these plastics and even die eating plastic," he said.

"We need to stop."

For Naranbat, work starts bright and early, when he and his colleagues head out to collect waste from those who can't bring it to the facility themselves.

They then separate the plastics into what can be re-used and what can't.

The plastic is then pressed into one-ton cubes, placed on a truck and sent to the capital Ulaanbaatar for processing.

People in the areas used to dump plastic in giant pits or burn it, Naranbat said.

"But when we learned about how this plastic pollution is detrimental, not only for the world but for our own country, we asked: 'what have we done?'" he said.

"We are the ones who caused the problem, we should be the ones to solve the issue."

Herder Batmunkh, who is 58, also decided to help, heading out on his horse every week to scour the steppe for rubbish to pick up and deliver to Ecosoum.

"While I'm herding, I'll spot a bit of garbage and I'll put it in the bag that I have," he said.

His diligence hasn't always made him friends.

"When I tell my neighbours to take care of the garbage, they mock me and say: 'Batmunkh rambles on about nonsense,'" he said.

"They don't care."

- 'Large companies' to blame -

While individual habits need to change, Naranbat said the companies that produce the plastic must be held accountable.

"They need to change and start using other forms of material, like aluminium -- those things are recyclable," he said.

A fourth and penultimate round of UN-led negotiations on a world-first pact to solve global plastic pollution wrapped up in Canada in April.

Talks are set to conclude in November in South Korea, though a proposed cap on plastic production did not make it into the draft text and remains a major sticking point.

But Batmunkh said he felt everyone needed to play a role in helping make Earth a better place.

"The things that separate us from animals is our rationality –- that makes us human," he said, his young grandson, hanging on his every word, pulling on his arm.

"As humans who are living on this Earth, all of us need to bear the responsibility of caring for our planet."

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)