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Paradise Lost on Maldives' Rubbish Island
It may be known as a tropical paradise, an archipelago of 1,200 coral islands in the Indian Ocean. But the traditional image of the Maldives hides a dirty secret: the world's biggest rubbish island.
Maldives President Mohamed Nasheed attends a business meeting organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) and the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) in New Delhi December 23, 2008. Earlier this month the new president, Mohamed Nasheed, told the Guardian of his radical solution to save his people: put aside some of the Maldives' tourism revenues to buy another homeland. (Reuters/B Mathur/India) A few miles and a short boat ride from the Maldivian capital, Malé, Thilafushi began life as a reclamation project in 1992. The artificial island was built to solve Malé's refuse problem. But today, with more than 10,000 tourists a week in the Maldives adding their waste, the rubbish island now covers 50 hectares (124 acres).
So much is being deposited that the island is growing at a square metre a day. There are more than three dozen factories, a mosque and homes for 150 Bangladeshi migrants who sift through the mounds of refuse beneath palm-fringed streets.
Environmentalists say that more than 330 tonnes of rubbish is brought to Thilafushi a day. Most of it comes from Malé, which is one of the world's most densely populated towns: 100,000 people cram into 2 square kilometres.
Brought on ships, the rubbish is taken onshore and sifted by hand. Some of the waste is incinerated but most is buried in landfill sites. There is, say environmental campaigners, also an alarming rise in batteries and electronic waste being dumped in Thilafushi's lagoon.
"We are seeing used batteries, asbestos, lead and other potentially hazardous waste mixed with the municipal solid wastes being put into the water. Although it is a small fraction of the total, these wastes are a source of toxic heavy metals and it is an increasingly serious ecological and health problem in the Maldives," said Ali Rilwan, an environmentalist in Malé.
Despite the growing crisis, Thilafushi remains largely hidden from view. Nobody goes there apart from workers.
Meanwhile, tourism has made the Maldives the richest country in South Asia in terms of GDP a head - which is around $4,500 (£3,100) - though that wealth is thinly spread.
However, almost everything has to be imported. Most tourists can only be catered for by bringing in thousands of tonnes of meat, vegetables and diesel oil every year.
All this produces what many say is an unsustainable amount of waste. Every tourist produces 3.5kg of rubbish and requires 500 litres of water a day.
The lack of space means the Maldives is now "exporting junk" to India. "Before, the ships that brought our vegetables from south India used to return empty, but now we are sending them crushed cans, metals, cardboard. They then sort them out and get cash for them," said Rilwan.
Environment issues are a major political issue in the Maldives, not least because its 300,000 people face being the first to be submerged under rising sea levels caused by global warming.
Earlier this month the new president, Mohamed Nasheed, told the Guardian of his radical solution to save his people: put aside some of the Maldives' tourism revenues to buy another homeland.
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8 Comments so far
Show AllOverpopulation
deleted
Give them Israel, and all the military support they need to keep it.
The issue of batteries is a significant one........ Batteries which we use by the millions in western nations all contain some extremely toxic materials..... the worst of course are nickel cadmium batteries. Cadmium is incredibly toxic. Manufacturers of such products MUST be required to develop reprocessing methods and sell batteries with a huge deposit...... probably significantly more than the battery itself..... if this is to be stopped.
Similarly we need disposal protocols for energy saving light bulbs, which contain mercury.
Joe
This happens because, the industries are making packaged good which have to be thrashed. Battery makers are not concerned with re-cycling responsibilities.
Can't blame this on overpopulation. Or on Maldive or any other poor nations dealing with products from industry in which they have no say.
Lets start looking at lifecycle of product being produced using capital market.
Look at your own garbage during christmas holidays...
toophat for you!
We can blame most societal problems including this one, on overpopulation. Here are some examples:
http://www.npg.org/
The amount of plastic that my household re-cycles makes me kind of ashamed and appalled. I look at my trash and think how wasteful the over-packaging has become. I remember a Julia Childs show in which she was making a salad Nicoise. The small purchase of olives came in a paper cone, anchovies likewise in a little square of paper. I think perhaps she went shopping with a basket and loaded in other items. It looked so simple and lovely. We could simplify some and it makes it easier to see the beauty and value of each thing we use.
I was wondering if stores like Costco or consumer co-ops would consider having big kegs of laundry detergent and such and letting customers fill their own pre-measured re-usable containers from a spigot. That would mean that only the kegs would require the thick sturdy plastic that stands up to transport.
Costco did away with both paper and plastic bags long ago and customers adjusted just fine. Most of us have begun to use cloth bags at the markets. Our habits can change. We should look for ways to sell things in re-usable containers, cloth bags, wax paper containers, paper containers etc. Packaging does not have to be multiple layers or impenetrable materials for most things.
We could start asking our supermarkets to look for low packaging products.
Joe