Environment & Urbanization, October 2011
Developing urban waste management in Brazil with waste picker organizations
Oscar Fergutz, Fundación AVINA, Brazil, oscar.fergutz@avina.net
Sonia Dias, Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO), Brazil, sonia.dias@wiego.org; soniamdias2010@gmail.com
Diana Mitlin, International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), London, Diana.mitlin@iied.org; Diana.mitlin@manchester.ac.uk
In Brazil’s large cities, more than half a million people survive by collecting and selling solid waste. Most face very poor working conditions and have very low incomes as the intermediaries to whom they sell pay low prices. Their activities are even considered illegal in some nations. But the waste pickers save city governments money, contribute to cleaner cities and reduce the volume of waste that has to be dumped (by up to 20 per cent).
After describing the waste pickers and the city and national associations they have created, this paper describes the recycling industry and gives some examples of better methods of recycling. These include waste picker cooperatives that can sell the materials they collect direct to industries and that have partnerships with city governments who provide access to wastes, better prices and facilities to improve working conditions (including transferring the recycling from dumps to recycling centres).