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"In San Francisco, 77 percent of organic waste is diverted in this way," said GAIA's Christie Keith. Her organization and other supporters flew representatives of scavenger associations from eight nations to Cancun to, among other things, raise their concerns with the CDM board of directors at an open discussion Tuesday, when they urged the board to reconsider its approval of such incinerator and landfill projects. On Wednesday, a dozen garbage recyclers from Latin America, India and South Africa unfurled banners on the steps of a conference meeting hall, with slogans reading "Respect for Waste Pickers" and "Zero Waste for Climate Justice." "We Are Climate Fighters," they declared. The appearance on the world stage of people from the dumps of poorer nations, seeking the subsidies of the rich, points up how global warming is changing not just the climate but is upending entire sectors of traditional economies, as more and more billions of dollars are mobilized in the new realm of carbon finance. For Bhadakwad, making her way through the conference crowds in a brilliant saffron-and-violet sari, the air-conditioned U.N. stage was a long way from the refuse heaps of Pune, where she and her husband divided the jobs of collecting and separating recyclables to support their three sons. "I started at age 13 because of the economic condition of my family," she said. "My father was an alcoholic, that's why." Could she have imagined she was helping the planet? "I wasn't aware of these issues," she said, smiling at the question. "I didn't know we were helping the climate. But now I've come to know about it, about all the consequences of waste management."
[Associated
Press;
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