Kenya craftsmen to build boat out of
plastic waste
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[November 13, 2017]
By Siegfried Modola
LAMU, Kenya (Reuters) - The beaches of
Kenya's idyllic Lamu island are dotted with traditional Swahili stone
and coral houses, mansions built by European royalty, the odd donkey
and, increasingly, tidal lines of plastic trash.
When a resident organized a beach clean-up that collected 33 tons of
rubbish in a single summer, British-Ethiopian safari organizer Ben
Morrison decided he couldn't stand by while his beloved island was
ruined.
So the tall, bearded 42-year-old decided to try to design a traditional
dhow, or sailing boat, from recycled plastic, offering a market to
recyclers and persuading locals to conserve shrinking woodland.
"It is getting harder and harder for boat builders to find wood. I hope
that this project will allow the ancient skills of boat building to live
on, by shifting from ever-scarce wood to plastic," Morrison told
Reuters.
Plastic pollution is a growing global problem, with patches of sea
larger than some countries covered in plastic soup that strangles or
poisons wildlife. The U.N. says by 2050, there will be more plastic in
the ocean than fish unless drastic action is taken.
In August, Kenya introduced one of the world's toughest bans on plastic
bags mandating four years in prison or a fine of $40,000 for even using
one.
The East African country is now contemplating measures to control
plastic bottles, said John Konchellah, chairman of the National
Environment Management Authority.
"We want to see plastic bottles out of circulation," he told Reuters.
"We want to borrow some technology from the region like PETCO in South
Africa, where major manufacturers came together with a body that
recycles plastic bottles."
Petco is a company formed by the South African plastics industry to
recycle some types of plastic.
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A traditional sailing dhow carries coral bricks for construction
near the island of Lamu, Kenya, November 9, 2017. REUTERS/Siegfried
Modola
Morrison, working with eight expert Kenyan boat builders, is using
plastic planks from the fledgling local recycling industry to build
his boat, which he hopes to sail to Cape Town in South Africa.
"We struggle to produce a consistent material out of the recycled
plastic," he said. "It's not easy. Sometimes we receive plastic
planks from the factory that are full of air bubbles. We can't build
with them and so we have to start from the beginning again."
Ali Skanda, a 44-year-old master boat builder, said in his childhood
there was no litter on Lamu's sandy golden beaches - just fishermen,
dhows and donkeys. Now many donkeys are dying from eating plastic,
he said - and so are turtles, cows and other animals.
"At the beginning I thought it was a crazy idea. How could I build a
boat out of plastic?" he asked. "Some people have been asking what
we can do about this problem. There is so much plastic scattered.
This is something we can do."
(additional reporting by John Ndiso; writing by Katharine Houreld;
editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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