47221 noTE no. 44 ­ oCT 2008GRIDLINES Sharing knowledge, experiences, and innovations in public-private partnerships in infrastructure The informal recycling sector in developing countries Organizing waste pickers to enhance their impact Martin Medina F or the urban poor in developing countries, the materials--after some sorting, cleaning, and informal waste recycling is a common processing--to scrap dealers, who in turn sell to way to earn income. There are few reliable industry. In these circumstances middlemen often estimates of the number of people engaged in earn large profits, while waste pickers are paid far waste picking or of its economic and environ- too little to escape poverty. mental impact. Yet studies suggest that when organized and supported, waste picking can Municipalities often consider waste pickers a spur grassroots investment by poor people, problem. Indeed, unorganized waste picking can create jobs, reduce poverty, save municipali- have an adverse impact on neighborhoods and ties money, improve industrial competitive- cities. Waste pickers often scatter the contents of ness, conserve natural resources, and protect garbage bags or bins to salvage anything of value. the environment. Three models have been used They do not always put the garbage back, increas- to organize waste pickers: microenterprises, ing the municipality's costs for waste collection. cooperatives, and public-private partnerships. Their carts may interfere with traffic. And if they These can lead to more efficient recycling and use horses or donkeys to pull their carts, the more effective poverty reduction. manure may end up on the streets. Municipal authorities often ban waste pickers' activities. But Waste pickers can be seen at work around the bans only drive the activities underground. Waste world. In developing countries about 1 percent pickers adapt by salvaging materials at odd hours of the urban population--at least 15 million or bribing the police. The result is usually lower people--survive by salvaging recyclables from incomes and more difficult working conditions. waste (figure 1). The factors that "push" people into waste picking are fundamentally economic. Organizing for empowerment Many poor people, faced with a choice between starving or waste picking, choose the latter. By getting organized, waste pickers can strengthen their bargaining position with industry and Many waste pickers belong to vulnerable groups: government, become actors in the development recent migrants, the unemployed, the disabled, process, and overcome poverty through grassroots women, children, the elderly. They survive development. Working together, they can gain in a hostile social environment, sometimes rejected stability, higher incomes, and legalization of their by society. They work on the streets and in open activities. They can obtain better prices by circum- dumps, where daily contact with all kinds of venting middlemen and adding value to materials waste--including hazardous and medical waste-- sold. Organized into cooperatives, they can enter poses risks to their health (Cointreau 2006). into contracts with industry or grant agreements Children are especially vulnerable (box 1). with donors. Because industry demands large volumes of mate- rials that are processed--sorted, baled, crushed, or PUBLIC-PRIVATE INFRASTRUCTURE ADVISORY FACILITY Martin Medina has collaborated for more than 12 years granulated--it does not buy directly from individ- with academic and international organizations on waste ual waste pickers. Instead, middlemen purchase management and urban environmental issues in Africa, recyclables recovered by waste pickers, then sell Asia, and Latin America. Helping to eliminate poverty and achieve sustainable development through public-private partnerships in infrastructure PUBLIC-PRIVATE INFRASTRUCTURE ADVISORY FACILITY waste pickers by freeing them from having to walk Figure 1 several miles a day in search of materials. By taking Large numbers of people are engaged in waste picking their work out of dumpsites, it also greatly reduces Estimated number of waste pickers in selected health risks from contact with waste. Source- countries, 2007 (millions) separation programs are becoming increasingly 7 common in schools, businesses, office buildings, 6 and residential neighborhoods. The recyclables gathered are sold or given to waste picker orga- 5 nizations. In some cases, as in Mexico, donations 4 of recyclables to waste picker organizations and 3 charities are tax deductible for businesses (Medina 2 2007, p. 147). 1 Some other benefits of organization and formal- 0 China India Brazil Colombia Turkey ization are less tangible. Working as part of a cooperative and wearing a uniform boosts waste Sources: Dhuy 2008; Liu 2008; Medina 2007. pickers' self-esteem. In a recent survey in six Latin American countries more than 90 percent of waste The change in power relations between waste pick- pickers reported that they liked what they did and ers and government, middlemen, industry, and considered it decent work (Medina 2008). broader society has led to significant improve- ments. By working together, these actors have Governments can support this process of formaliza- been able to change unfriendly laws, policies, and tion. Legalizing waste-picking activities, preferably regulations. In Brazil and Colombia waste-picking at the national level, is usually a first significant activities are now supported by the government. step toward improving the lot of waste pickers. In Brazil waste picking is now recognized as an This could be followed by a sequence of measures. occupation, and organized waste pickers are seen A careful analysis of waste pickers' activities would as legitimate stakeholders who can voice their provide reliable estimates of the number of people opinions at the local, state, and national levels. involved and their economic impact. A consul- Waste picker organizations enter into informal tation process involving waste pickers and other key stakeholders could help design waste manage- By getting agreements or formal contracts with businesses, industry, and neighborhood associations to gain ment systems that are inclusive, socially desirable, organized, access to recyclable materials or to sell materials economically viable, and environmentally sound. Finally, supportive programs such as that being waste pickers or manufactured items. launched in Brazil could be designed to include become One of the main benefits of formalization is the the informal sector in waste management and possibility of entering into agreements or contracts recycling programs (box 2). empowered for recycling programs with separation at source. Recovering materials that have been separated The move to empower waste pickers is gaining at source raises the productivity and incomes of momentum worldwide. There has been explosive Box 1. Reducing child laBoR in waste picking Children often engage in waste picking, to contribute to the family income or to survive on their own. Waste picking, particularly at open dumps, is among the worst forms of child labor. It can damage children's health and stunt their development. Brazil has had the most success in reducing this form of child labor, through a national campaign. Parents of child waste pickers were enrolled in Bolsa Familia, a conditional cash transfer program that gives parents a monthly stipend as long as they send their children to school, get them vaccinated, and obtain prenatal care. The stipend compensates families for the loss of income from child labor. Thanks to this program, supported by World Bank credits, more than 40,000 children left waste picking and now attend school. Sometimes this outcome is unexpected. In Cairo informal refuse collectors used donkey carts. Because the carts could be stolen if left unattended, children had to guard them while their parents or older brothers worked. In 1987 the Cairo authorities banned the use of donkey carts for waste collection. The collectors purchased pickup trucks instead. Pickup trucks do not need to be guarded--and children could be sent to school. Sources: Dias 2008; Medina 2007. The informal recycling sector in developing countries Box 2. integRating waste pickeRs in BRazil A national program to improve municipal solid waste management in Brazil, the Integrated Solid Waste and Carbon Finance Project, is developing strategies for incorporating waste pickers into local waste management systems. This effort involves multiple stakeholders--activists, academics, waste picker organizations, other affected groups, nongovernmental organizations, and federal, state, and local government. The project is among the first World Bank­financed operations to include the issue of waste picking so early in the design phase--and as a central part of its basic objectives. A key focus is careful definition of the roles and responsibilities of informal the actors involved, including the municipality, the service provider, the financing institution, and the waste pickers. PPIAF support has been requested for developing new contractual models that will include obligations recycling has for concessionaires with respect to waste pickers. a significant Brazil has one of the most progressive policy and institutional frameworks for waste-picking activities--and a vast range of municipal settings for investigating the dynamics of incorporating waste pickers into municipal solid economic waste management. If successful, the project will serve as a model for Bank operations worldwide. impact Source: Peter Cohen, World Bank consultant, personal communication, 2008. growth in the number of cooperatives in recent and extending the life span of dumps and sanitary years, especially in South America. Brazilian landfills. waste pickers have formed a national movement. National associations of waste picker groups also Recycling has obvious environmental benefits, exist in Argentina, Colombia, India, and Uruguay. and the involvement of waste pickers in recycling In South America the waste picker movement is programs can enhance those. The recovery and consolidating and developing links with waste recycling of inorganic material by waste pickers picker organizations in Africa and Asia. saves energy. Recycling aluminum, for example, requires only 3­5 percent of the energy needed economic and environmental to obtain aluminum from bauxite. Waste pick- benefits ers' composting activities also divert organic waste away from dumps and landfills, reducing the gener- In many developing countries these organiza- ation of methane. tion and support activities not only benefit waste pickers as a group; they also generate significant Models for organizing waste pickers economic benefits for the society as a whole (box 3). Through their informal recycling activities, Three models for organizing waste pickers have waste pickers broaden their sources of income proved to be successful: microenterprises, coopera- and lower the costs of recycling for municipali- tives, and public-private partnerships. ties. They also contribute to national industrial competitiveness and benefit the environment. Thousands of microenterprises across the develop- ing world serve neighborhoods that lack municipal Informal recycling improves industrial competitive- waste collection services while providing income ness in two main ways. First, materials recovered opportunities for entrepreneurial individuals. A by waste pickers are generally cheaper than virgin study in three Mexican cities found that nearly materials. Second, recycling requires less energy 3,000 informal refuse collectors collect 353,000 than obtaining virgin raw materials, lowering tons of waste a year, earning up to five times the industry's operating costs. In Mexico, for example, minimum wage. Informal collectors invest in wastepaper recovered by waste pickers is seven pushcarts, donkey carts, horse carts, and pickup times cheaper than imported wood pulp. Mexican trucks to transport waste. They usually recover paper mills have strengthened their backward links recyclables in the waste before disposal (Medina with waste pickers to lower their costs and survive 2007, p. 147). the competition with Canadian and U.S. paper- makers resulting from NAFTA (Medina 2005). Cooperatives are most numerous in Latin America. Brazil alone has about 500 waste picker coopera- Recycling by waste pickers saves municipalities tives, with about 60,000 members. Belo Horizonte money by reducing the volume of waste that needs is home to one of the first groups that incorpo- to be collected, transported, and disposed of. In rated former street waste pickers into a program, Jakarta it has been estimated that waste pickers ASMARE (Associação dos Catadores de Papel, reduce the volume of waste by 30 percent, saving Papelão e Material Reaprovitável). Today ASMARE the municipality fuel, equipment, and labor costs has 380 members, 55 percent of them women, and Box 3. a suBstantial economic impact There is scant knowledge of the size and importance of the informal recycling sector in developing and transition economies. But some recent estimates suggest that its economic impact is larger than previously believed. · In Mumbai more than 30,000 waste pickers recover reusable and recyclable items from the waste stream. They have created more than 400 microenterprises that process waste materials and make consumer products from them. The economic impact of these activities: an estimated $650 million­1 billion a year. · In Buenos Aires more than 40,000 waste pickers recover cardboard and other recyclables on the streets. Their economic impact is estimated at $178 million a year. · In Jakarta 37,000 waste pickers recover 25 percent of the city's waste (378,000 tons a year), saving the city $300,000 a month and producing an economic impact of more than $50 million a year. Source: Medina 2007. recycles 500 tons of material a month. Another dealers, and industry. The program is expected to well-known cooperative is COOPAMARE (Coop- benefit about 6 mills, 100 small and micro enter- erativa de Catadores Autônomos de Papel, Aparas prises, and more than 2,000 waste pickers. e Materiais Reprovitáveis), founded in São Paulo in 1989. It has 80 members along with about 200 Conclusion independent waste pickers who sell it materials. COOPAMARE collects and sells about 100 tons Incorporating waste pickers into waste manage- of recyclables a month, at a lower cost than the ment and recycling programs can in many cases be city recycling program. Its members earn $300 a socially desirable, economically viable, and envi- month, twice the minimum wage. ronmentally sound. To do so, however, decision makers need to recognize that waste pickers can Public-private partnerships for collecting waste be an asset, and municipalities need to engage and recyclables can benefit waste picker groups with them as potential partners. Waste pickers and the broader society. In partnerships in several have already started to organize themselves using Colombian cities, the municipality provides infra- different business models. In some countries structure and equipment while waste pickers governments have launched programs to support provide labor. In Bogotá a partnership has been this formalization. Similarly, international donors formed to operate a recycling plant, managed by are increasingly integrating waste pickers into the Bogotá Association of Waste Pickers, where programs to foster urban development, promote the municipality takes recyclables separated at a cleaner environment, and increase recycling source. activities. International development organizations are work- References ingtosupporttheformalizationandorganizationof Cointreau, Sandra. 2006. "Occupational and Environmental Health waste pickers in several regions. With the financial Issues of Solid Waste Management: Special Emphasis on Middle- and Lower-Income Countries." Urban Papers 2, World Bank, support of the Austrian government, for example, Washington, DC. the International Finance Corporation (IFC) is Dhuy, Eloise. 2008. "Ankara Recycling Association." Paper presented implementing a program to support recycling busi- at the First World Conference of Waste Pickers, Bogotá, March. nesses in Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Dias, Sonia. 2008. "Fórum Lixo e Cidadania: Catadores de Problema former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Social à Questão Sócio-Ambiental." Paper presented at the First GRIDLINES Montenegro, and Serbia. Waste pickers World Conference of Waste Pickers, Bogotá, March. supply at least 40 percent of the raw Liu, Kaiming. 2008. "Labor Issues and Waste Collectors in China." Paper presented at the First World Conference of Waste Pickers, Gridlines share emerging knowledge materials that industry recycles in Bogotá, March. on public-private partnership and give an the region. Most are Roma, a popu- Medina, Martin. 2005. "Serving the Unserved: Informal Refuse overview of a wide selection of projects from lation facing high rates of poverty Collection in Mexican Cities." Waste Management and Research 23 various regions of the world. Past notes can be and illiteracy. IFC is providing (5): 390­97. found at www.ppiaf.org/gridlines. Gridlines are a publication of PPIAF (Public-Private Infrastructure technical assistance and capac- PUBLIC-PRIVATE INFRASTRUCTURE ADVISORY FACILITY ------. 2007. The World's Scavengers: Salvaging for Sustainable Advisory Facility), a multidonor technical assistance ity development throughout Consumption and Production. Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press. facility. Through technical assistance and knowledge the supply chain, from waste ------. 2008. "Supporting Community-Based Recycling Initiatives dissemination PPIAF supports the efforts of policy pickers to middlemen, scrap in Latin America and the Caribbean." Grassroots Development 29 makers, nongovernmental organizations, research (1): 26­31. institutions, and others in designing and implementing strategies to tap the full potential of private involvement in c/o The World Bank, 1818 H St., N.W., Washington, DC 20433, USA infrastructure. The views are those of the authors and do PhOne (+1) 202 458 5588 FAX(+1) 202 522 7466 not necessarily reflect the views or the policy of PPIAF, PUBLIC-PRIVATE INFRASTRUCTURE ADVISORY FACILITY generAL eMAiLppiaf@ppiaf.org weB www.ppiaf.org the World Bank, or any other affiliated organization.