

Our Network of Villages
Long lasting change happens one village at a time, at first. But inspiring local champions is the greater strength of our program as they are the ones to spread the word to the communities and take it away for the best. This is how we measure success, in addition to the number of smiles. The challenge is still on!

First contact in Bari with Ali, the Kepala Besa
A FOUR-STEP PROGRAM

STEP 1: FIRST CONTACT
We introduce the program and the win-win concept to the Kepala Desa (Village Head) & other interested villagers
STEP 2: COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
We go back to the village to explain the value of waste, training on waste sorting & raise awareness about prices (install poster), select a local champion and help set up bins
STEP 3: WASTE COLLECTION TRIAL
A few weeks later, we collect a first round of waste from the village as an experiment, show the meaning & financial incentive
STEP 4: REGULAR COLLECTION
Validate village as part of the network for regular waste pick ups, keep educating on waste reduction by introducing alternatives

The impact on tourism

In these beautiful remote and coastal indonesian regions, the economy strongly relies on the tourism industry: resorts, liveaboard, diving and other ocean-related leisures. Needless to say that the recurring plastic pollution is strongly reducing the attractiveness for some regions or forcing authorities to reduce access to tourists or even close down some areas.


Plastics entering the food chain ...

Indonesia is home to many communities fully relying on the sea to live. For instance, the Bajos or Sea Gipsies in the Flores Sea are living in harmony with the ocean. But plastic waste mismanagement is already disturbing this balance in the short term and even more in the middle to long term. Immediate actions are required to reduce this threat and offer resilient and economically-viable opportunities to avoid and treat this waste.


We support and work with local NGOs

There is no way to succeed without the involvement of the communities. That's why we really started by empowering people to act and joined forces with other existing programs and Yayasans (local NGO).
For this reason, we created a Learning Center to host gathering and seminars, education programs for kids but also waste collection, sorting and upcycling.


Education & Awareness programs

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Education from a young age to the value of our environment and the notion of waste through reading stories, paintings, teaching english.
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Workshops on waste reduction and sorting and its purpose, waste sorting and collection challenges with incentives.
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Regular beach cleanups
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Data collection through waste characterization and quantification at the household level and also for marine debris


A virtuous local waste management

Initiating villagers to waste sorting and collection is a huge step ahead. This is what we experimented in Rangko village near Labuan Bajo.
The goal now: making as much value as possible from this waste and progressively reduce it at the source by introducing alternatives to single-use plastics.
We also intend to leverage this first experience to extend the good practice to a network of other remote coastal or island villages with urgent needs.


From upcycling to viable alternatives

At the very local level, finding valuable end-of-life strategies for plastic waste can be a real struggle. But relying on local strengths is likely to help unlock some possibilities. Creating fashionable grocery bags out of disposable cups is one way but there are many others.
We are organizing upcycling workshops as one more step to inspire and show the value of waste and the need to sort it.
At the same time, going back to traditional handicraft is an even better way to cut waste at the source.


E-nemo, an innovative waste collection in islands

100% solar-powered, the e-Nemo will have the mission to:
- Collect the waste that has been picked up by coastal communities,
- Collect the waste of other live-aboard cruises like ours,
- Transport the NGO staff from villages to villages,
- Transport local children from their villages to snorkeling sites, as part of our awareness campaign.
Combining local experience and global expertise

Our local presence is precious with its direct impact to the benefitting communities but also to feed our global thinking and research regarding plastic waste management solutions in the developing world.
In parallel to action, we are conducting academic research aiming at analysing existing plastic waste management initiatives and solutions. We focused on drivers of success or failure of plastic waste management initiatives. In addition, after 2 years of R&D, we developed a model to help match any given local plastic waste management situation with a technical solution combined with a viable business model.



Usual pain points for plastic recycling projects
Leveraging our research and experience to help develop new projects

By joining forces with our partner Plastic Odyssey, we combine technical, economic, finance knowledge in addition to an extensive international network with access to a large spectrum of solutions and successful projects leaders.
We are leveraging our experience and models to help organisations and entrepreneurs start or accelerate their plastic recycling projects.