The numbers on Indonesia’s plastic waste challenge are sobering. Indonesia’s National Plastic Action Partnership estimates that only 10 percent of Indonesia’s yearly 6.8 million tons of plastic waste is recycled and nearly half is dumped or burned. Indonesia is responsible for 10 percent of global plastic leakage into the ocean, second only behind China.
Encouragingly, the Indonesian government has set up a collaborative action plan involving 16 ministries working to reduce marine plastic litter by 70 percent by 2025. The Indonesian government also partners with USAID on the front line of its plastic waste crisis. To date, USAID’s 30+ Municipal Waste Recycling Program grant recipients (seven of which are in Indonesia) have prevented thousands of tons of plastic from reaching the ocean, worked to support plastic pollution control laws, engaged and educated communities, and created equitable jobs.
Clare Romanik (USAID) will kick off this March 30th panel highlighting the accomplishments of USAID's Municipal Waste Recycling Program (MWRP) and the goals of USAID’s new program Clean Cities Blue Ocean. Swietenia Puspa Lestari (Divers Clean Action) will share how the MWRP has activated their youth-led plastic pollution clean-up movement. Moh. Nurhadi will share his story on how the Bintari Foundation has helped strengthen recycling policies in Semarang City and built profitable waste banks and neighborhood facilities to process collected waste and recover recyclable materials. April Crow will talk about her work at Circulate Capital investing in sustainable waste value chains and creating a “second life” for post-consumer plastic materials in Indonesia to attract the catalytic capital needed to help with this challenge.
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