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Dinh Thi Luyen shows other farmers compost she makes from leftover food and probiotics. — VNS Photos Khoa Thu 

Whether it ends up in a landfill or drifts out to sea, to manage waste is to know how it is generated, according to researcher Chu Manh Trinh. 

Tracing the journey of waste, the researcher, who has studied and worked on waste management for nearly 20 years, in early June led a group of some 30 farmers, scrap collectors and public servants from Da Nang, Binh Dinh, Binh Thuan and Binh Duong to Area 8 fishery village in Ha Long City’s Ha Phong District, Quang Ninh Province. 

The village is inhabited by people from five smaller villages scattered on Ha Long Bay who were persuaded to move to Ha Phong in 2014 by local authorities to ensure their children enjoy a good education and to conserve the bay's ecosystem. 

Up to 380 fishing boats dock at the village’s pier twice a month, bringing ashore garbage produced after 14-day trips. 

Leftover food is dumped in the water while tin cans, plastic bags and bottles are brought back as the fine for dumping them in Ha Long Bay is too high for fishermen to pay. 

Making money from waste is a new approach introduced by Trinh under the framework of 'Scaling Up a Socialised Model of Domestic Waste and Plastic Management in 5 Cities' (DWP5C) – a project implemented in Quang Ninh, Da Nang, Binh Dinh, Binh Thuan and Binh Duong provinces by UNDP Vietnam, the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Vietnam Administration of Seas and Islands. 

The project aims to help local people earn by thoroughly sorting and treating waste.

“Waste is not something to dispose of if we look closely into its lifespan,” said Trinh. “This approach offers chances to use waste as a resource and turn it to profits.”  

Inspired after joining a waste sorting workshop by Vietnam Women’s Union, for two years, Dinh Thi Luyen in Ha Phong District has practised composting at home. 

Organic waste from fishing boats and fresh markets, including seashells, rotten vegetables and leftover food are collected, mixed with probiotics and fermented for up to 60 days to make fertiliser to replace the chemical alternatives. 

“Without the homemade compost, we could never grow offseason tomatoes,” Luyen told her fellow farmers. 

“During summer, tomato plants can easily get scorched. By fertilising them with nutritious compost, we can reap juicy and organic tomatoes even during hot months,” she said. 

Luyen’s model is expected to become part of the community-based waste management chain in Ha Long City, connected with other links to ease pressure on local treatment plants and landfills. 

Bui Thi Nha Trang, an agricultural lecturer of Ha Long University, said the institute had worked with Luyen to experimentally rear black soldier flies as protein-packed, sustainable and inexpensive food for her fish pond and pig farm. 

“We expect to develop a model of the circular economy for local farming households, helping them utilise waste, make profits and protect the environment at the same time,” said Trang. 

To address recyclable plastic bags, bottles and tin cans, scrap collectors and waste treatment plants have teamed up. 

The project also aims to support scrap collectors with personal protective equipment, engage the community into classifying waste and bring treatment plants into the co-management process. 

“Tracing waste’s lifespan opens opportunities to connect people, scientists, enterprises and even authorities to come up with comprehensive and effective treatment,” said Trinh. 

“The role of scrap collectors, who have been long considered a vulnerable group, is critical in this process,” he added. 

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A plastic waste recycling workshop in Quang Ninh Solid Waste Treatment Plant. The province has approved the community-based waste management project in collaboration with UNDP Vietnam, the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Vietnam Administration of Seas and Islands. 

Flexible approaches

DWP5C duplicates a model which has been successfully implemented in Quang Nam Province’s Hoi An Town for a decade. 

Recalling the first days, Nguyen Thi Tai, a Hoi An scrap collector, said with a cart and notebook sponsored by the project, she roamed around town buying bottles and cans and teaching others how to sort waste and classify it properly. 

“If plastic bottles get dirty or discharged along with other waste, it is costly or even impossible to recycle them,” said Tai. 

“We show people how they can collect and store discarded bottles, cans and bags to resell at higher prices and help reduce waste buried in local landfills,” she added. 

Hoang Thanh Vinh, DWP5C coordinator from UNDP Vietnam, said the project helped apply flexible approaches based on each locality’s conditions. 

In Quang Ninh Province, the farmer’s union leads, focusing on scrap collectors but also fishing boats and fresh markets. 

“Solid waste management requires the participation of different stakeholders,” said Vinh. 

“We have women to sort their domestic waste, scrap collectors to get recyclable items, farmers to make compost from leftover food so only the rest must go to public waste treatment plants,” he added. 

In Quang Ninh Province, the project has cost nearly US$287,500 with $109,000 sponsored by Global Environment Facility and UNDP and the rest allocated from the local budget.

“The locality’s contribution shows its commitment to managing waste and addressing white pollution, especially on Ha Long Bay,” said Vinh. 

One of every three foreign tourists to Vietnam visits Quang Ninh Province, according to Cao Tuong Huy, deputy head of the provincial People’s Committee. 

“Accelerating environmental sustainability is one of our key strategies to improve residents’ living conditions and promote tourism,” Huy said. 

Vietnam is the world's fourth-largest marine plastic generator with some 1.8 million tonnes of plastic waste discharged each year. 

Only 14 per cent of it is classified for recycle, mostly by scrap collectors, according to Nguyen Que Lam, Deputy Director-General of the Vietnam Administration of Seas and Islands. 

“Poor management, limited waste treatment capacity and low public awareness on environmental problems have worsened plastic pollution in Vietnam,” Lam said at DWP5C project’s launching event last week.  VNS 

Khoa Thu 

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