Zürcher Nachrichten - Out of Nile, into tile: Young Egyptians battle plastic plague

EUR -
AED 4.229429
AFN 72.554099
ALL 95.750385
AMD 433.579157
ANG 2.061548
AOA 1056.061981
ARS 1575.408069
AUD 1.67154
AWG 2.075848
AZN 1.953128
BAM 1.951537
BBD 2.31593
BDT 141.090548
BGN 1.968524
BHD 0.434187
BIF 3415.530825
BMD 1.151649
BND 1.477682
BOB 7.963603
BRL 6.031528
BSD 1.149833
BTN 108.365851
BWP 15.811038
BYN 3.453077
BYR 22572.322488
BZD 2.312637
CAD 1.595282
CDF 2632.098124
CHF 0.917732
CLF 0.027078
CLP 1069.178987
CNY 7.959565
CNH 7.968583
COP 4248.882697
CRC 533.098361
CUC 1.151649
CUP 30.518701
CVE 110.029407
CZK 24.528054
DJF 204.762896
DKK 7.47183
DOP 69.32374
DZD 153.273336
EGP 60.812715
ERN 17.274737
ETB 177.708377
FJD 2.599733
FKP 0.862658
GBP 0.865389
GEL 3.10365
GGP 0.862658
GHS 12.571863
GIP 0.862658
GMD 84.641115
GNF 10080.278384
GTQ 8.797316
GYD 240.572357
HKD 9.021524
HNL 30.532443
HRK 7.531328
HTG 150.582538
HUF 389.632783
IDR 19550.395232
ILS 3.63351
IMP 0.862658
INR 109.213761
IQD 1506.356892
IRR 1512460.771615
ISK 143.403571
JEP 0.862658
JMD 180.714227
JOD 0.816531
JPY 184.176325
KES 149.36272
KGS 100.712255
KHR 4604.680719
KMF 491.754112
KPW 1036.585888
KRW 1737.630963
KWD 0.354305
KYD 0.958273
KZT 553.941379
LAK 24836.233141
LBP 102969.388375
LKR 361.628007
LRD 211.021828
LSL 19.67133
LTL 3.40052
LVL 0.696621
LYD 7.342609
MAD 10.736146
MDL 20.196651
MGA 4792.260345
MKD 61.606169
MMK 2421.386578
MNT 4122.891314
MOP 9.265936
MRU 45.866614
MUR 53.862385
MVR 17.804188
MWK 1993.83174
MXN 20.726747
MYR 4.616985
MZN 73.601955
NAD 19.67116
NGN 1594.089847
NIO 42.314437
NOK 11.164197
NPR 173.363228
NZD 1.997921
OMR 0.442797
PAB 1.149888
PEN 3.979572
PGK 4.9688
PHP 69.61833
PKR 321.001394
PLN 4.286179
PYG 7527.1966
QAR 4.193095
RON 5.096969
RSD 117.435999
RUB 93.43119
RWF 1679.136984
SAR 4.320808
SBD 9.261533
SCR 15.509187
SDG 692.141255
SEK 10.865251
SGD 1.482109
SHP 0.864035
SLE 28.273184
SLL 24149.518406
SOS 657.124504
SRD 43.258264
STD 23836.811334
STN 24.4449
SVC 10.06167
SYP 127.287496
SZL 19.668995
THB 37.907651
TJS 11.005327
TMT 4.042288
TND 3.383714
TOP 2.772894
TRY 51.202141
TTD 7.804544
TWD 36.853114
TZS 2970.088034
UAH 50.455328
UGX 4277.766223
USD 1.151649
UYU 46.620985
UZS 14006.28025
VES 536.68938
VND 30320.041852
VUV 137.860671
WST 3.172602
XAF 654.49026
XAG 0.016752
XAU 0.00026
XCD 3.11239
XCG 2.072401
XDR 0.813976
XOF 654.495931
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.840667
ZAR 19.771284
ZMK 10366.224424
ZMW 21.588806
ZWL 370.830542
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.8200

    15.24

    -5.38%

  • NGG

    -1.8900

    82.4

    -2.29%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.47

    -0.08%

  • AZN

    -3.7400

    183.4

    -2.04%

  • GSK

    -0.7600

    53.94

    -1.41%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    22.82

    -0.39%

  • RIO

    -1.7500

    85.79

    -2.04%

  • RELX

    -0.4000

    32.07

    -1.25%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.63

    -0.62%

  • BTI

    -0.1900

    58.26

    -0.33%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    22.75

    +0.31%

  • BCC

    -0.3600

    74.29

    -0.48%

  • BP

    0.7600

    46.17

    +1.65%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.07

    -0.25%

Out of Nile, into tile: Young Egyptians battle plastic plague
Out of Nile, into tile: Young Egyptians battle plastic plague / Photo: Khaled DESOUKI - AFP/File

Out of Nile, into tile: Young Egyptians battle plastic plague

Entrepreneurial young Egyptians are helping combat their country's huge plastic waste problem by recycling junk-food wrappers, water bottles and similar garbage that usually ends up in landfills or the Nile.

Text size:

At a factory on the outskirts of Cairo, run by their startup TileGreen, noisy machines gobble up huge amounts of plastic scraps of all colours, shred them and turn them into a thick liquid.

The sludge -- made from all kinds of plastic, even single-use shopping bags -- is then moulded into dark, compact bricks that are used as outdoor pavers for walkways and garages.

"They're twice as strong as concrete," boasts co-founder Khaled Raafat, 24, slamming one onto the floor for emphasis.

Each tile takes about "125 plastic bags out of the environment", says his business partner Amr Shalan, 26, raising his voice above the din of the machines.

Raafat said the company uses even low-grade plastics and products "made of many different layers of plastic and aluminium that are nearly impossible to separate and recycle sustainably".

Egypt, the Arab world's most populous country, is also the biggest plastic polluter in the Middle East and Africa, according to a multinational study reported by Science magazine.

The country generates more than three million tonnes of plastic waste per year, much of which piles up in streets and illegal landfills or finds its way into the Nile and the Mediterranean Sea.

Microplastics in the water concentrate in marine life, threatening the health of people who consume seafood and fish caught in Africa's mighty waterway -- mirroring what has become a worldwide environmental scourge.

- 'Their children's future' -

TileGreen, launched in 2021, aims to "recycle three billion to five billion plastic bags by 2025", said Shalan.

The start-up last year started selling its outdoor tiles, of which it has produced some 40,000 so far, and plans to expand into other products usually made from cement.

Egypt, a country of 104 million, has pledged to more than halve its annual consumption of single-use plastics by 2030 and to build multiple new waste management plants.

For now, however, more than two thirds of of Egypt's waste is "inadequately managed", according to the World Bank -- driving an ecological hazard environmental groups have been trying to tackle.

On the shores of the Nile island of Qursaya, some fishermen now collect and sort plastic trash they net from the river as part of an initiative by the group VeryNile.

As the Nile has become more polluted, the fishermen "could see their catches decreasing", said project manager Hany Fawzy, 47. "They knew this was their future and their children's future disappearing."

Over three-quarters of Cairo fish were found to contain microplastics in a 2020 study by a group of Danish and UK-based scientists published in the journal Toxics.

Off the port city of Alexandria, further north, microplastics were detected in 92 percent of fish caught, said a study last year by researchers at Egypt's National Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries.

VeryNile, started five years ago with a series of volunteer clean-up events, buys "between 10 and 12 tonnes of plastic a month" from 65 fishermen, paying them 14 Egyptian pounds (about 50 US cents) per kilogram, Fawzy said.

- 'Good step forward' -

VeryNile then compresses high-value plastic like water bottles and sends it to a recycling plant to be made into pellets.

Low-quality plastics such as food wrappers are incinerated to power a cement factory which, Fawzy said, keeps "the environment clean with air filters and a sensitive monitoring system."

"We can't clean up the environment in one spot just to pollute elsewhere," he said.

The Egyptian programmes are part of a battle against a global scourge.

Less than 10 percent of the world's plastic is recycled, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

The OECD said last year that annual production of fossil-fuel-based plastics is set to top 1.2 billion tonnes by 2060, with waste exceeding one billion tonnes.

In Egypt, activists have hailed what they see as a youth-led push for sustainability that has created demand for environmentally-minded solutions and products.

But while the change is welcome, they say it remains insufficient.

"What these initiatives have done is find a way to create a value chain, and there's clearly demand," said Mohamed Kamal, co-director of environmental group Greenish.

"Anything that captures value from waste in Egypt is a good step forward. But it's not solving the problem. It can only scratch the surface."

A.P.Huber--NZN