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Activists Applaud Commitment and Steps towards
Zero Waste at Earth Summit
At meeting, confirm will closely follow implementation of Zero
Waste plans
Gary Liss, Consultant, USA, (office) +1-916-652-7850, gary@garyliss.com
Johannesburg, South Africa, 27 August 2002 -- The United Nations,
the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) Civil Society Secretariat,
and the
South African Government are together implementing huge steps
towards
designing waste out of the system of the 2002 Earth Summit Civil
Society
Global Forum in Johannesburg, South Africa (August 19September
4). At the
"Zero Waste, Not Incineration Forum" on 27 August, activists
voiced hopes
that the waste reduction systems would be implemented as planned
by the
Global Forum management.
Waste targets for the Global Forum include:
· Reduce total potential waste by 80 to 90%
· Reduce water and energy consumption by 20%
· Zero waste to incinerators
The Global Forum will be the largest component of the World Summit
on
Sustainable Development, also called the Earth Summit; 30,000
delegates are
expected to attend the Global Forum daily at the height of activities.
The
Global Forum is located at the Johannesburg Expo Centre (Nasrec).
We hope that Global Forum and Earth Summit management will
implement these
plans correctly, to show that it is possible to drastically reduce
waste
through simple systems and educated product choices, said
Muna Lakhani,
coordinator of the Zero Waste Earth Summit team for Earthlife
Africa in
Johannesburg. We are educating participants to actively
take control of the
waste they produce, and we hope to inspire Zero Waste policies
in South
Africa and around the world.
Earthlife Africa (Johannesburg Branch), with the support of GAIA,
the Global
Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, has been working to design
waste out
of the Earth Summit, and reuse, recycle and compost as many discards
as
possible. A large element of Zero Waste efforts is preventing
the
procurement of environmentally-unsustainable products such as
plastic
packaging (especially PVC), plastic products that may be thrown
away, and
toxic chemicals and solvents.
Nitin Desai, Under-Secretary General of the United Nation responsible
for
the Earth Summit, met with Earthlife Africa's Zero Waste team
in June to
confirm his support for Zero Waste efforts throughout the Earth
Summit. "I
support this project, and encourage all to reach as close to Zero
Waste as
is possible," Mr. Desai stated.
Zero Waste refers to a range of policies and practices designed
to achieve a
sustainable use of materials and the minimum of waste discarded.
Zero Waste
is consistent with the recent Stockholm Convention's goal towards
elimination of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs), including
incinerator
by-products dioxin and furans. Zero Waste systems will reduce
the
environmental impact of the WSSD itself, set the highest standards
for
future events, and demonstrate the viability of Zero Waste to
thousands of
international visitors. Zero Waste also holds great potential
for
livelihood generation and poverty alleviation as reuse, recycling,
and
composting produce far more jobs than wasting.
Earthlife Africa is a volunteer driven South African organization
that has
been active on environmental and social issues since 1988. GAIA
is an
international alliance working on waste reduction, with over 265
members in
more than 55 countries. For more information, photographs of the
collection
systems, and updates, as well as articles about the waste problems
following
the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, please see
www.earthlife.org.za and www.no-burn.org
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