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Tourist haven Bali aims to blaze global trail on stemming ocean plastic

by Michael Taylor | @MickSTaylor | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Thursday, 20 June 2019 09:38 GMT

Less than half the island's waste is dealt with responsibly - but a new government-backed effort plans to change that

By Michael Taylor

KUALA LUMPUR, June 20 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Less than half of the garbage produced on Indonesia's resort island of Bali is recycled, with thousands of tonnes burned or dumped in rivers and the ocean, researchers warned on Thursday.

Only 48% of Bali's trash is managed responsibly through recycling or landfill, according to a five-month study by The Bali Partnership - the first step for the group's ambitious goal to end plastic pollution on the island and spur action beyond.

"What happens in Bali will always be noticed by the world," Ida Bagus Mandhara Brasika of the Bali Governor's waste management task force said in a statement.

"In Bali we are now at the right moment to stop our ocean leakage... We'll start from Bali and the impact will be global."

The Bali Partnership, backed by Norway, is a new organisation uniting Indonesia's central and local governments, academics, waste experts and businesses, to support a national commitment to reduce ocean plastics by 70% by 2025.

Like many parts of Asia, the Indonesian archipelago of more than 17,000 islands has a fast-growing economy and population, and a huge coastline with many densely populated cities.

These factors have created a "perfect storm" for trash finding its way into the surrounding seas, green groups said.

Garbage collection, recycling and other waste infrastructure have largely failed to keep pace with rapid development.

In Bali, which attracts about 6.5 million international tourists annually, trash regularly washes up its once-pristine beaches.

"We can see with our own eyes - without a microscope - the small pieces of plastic on the beaches," said Gede Hendrawan, a professor at Bali's Udayana University who led the research.

In response, tourists, volunteer groups, hotels and local authorities all conduct regular clean-ups.

The survey, which monitored the island's rivers and landfill sites and included 950 local households, as well as interviews with waste officials and volunteers, found Bali generates about 1.6 million tonnes of waste each year.

About 303,000 tonnes of that waste are plastic, of which 33,000 tonnes leak into Bali's waterways.

Indonesian and international tourists generate more than three times more waste per day than Bali residents, the study showed.

It is hoped Jakarta will use the findings to improve waste management and tackle the problem of plastic waste in oceans.

Two years ago, the government launched a national action plan pledging up to $1 billion to cut ocean waste 70% by 2025.

"Now we have comprehensive data to support the government's commitment to reduce ocean plastics by 2025," Hendrawan told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Bali needed more recycling and compost processing facilities, better management of waste collection, and systems to separate garbage from residents and businesses, he added.

At a leaders' summit starting on Thursday in Thailand, the 10-member Association of South East Asian Nations is expected to adopt a Bangkok Declaration on Combating Marine Debris.

(Reporting by Michael Taylor @MickSTaylor; Editing by Megan Rowling. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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