Waste pickers battle for recognition at plastic treaty talks

Waste pickers are seeking recognition in any new treaty to curb plastic pollution.

As diplomats negotiate behind closed doors in the South Korean city of Busan on a treaty to curb plastic pollution, the waste pickers who are on the front lines of the problem are fighting for recognition.

Between 20 and 34 million people are believed to work as waste pickers worldwide, playing a crucial role in recovering recyclable material.

"We're the biggest business in the world," 54-year-old Maria Soledad Mella Vidal, a Chilean waste picker, told French news agency AFP.

"We don't have money, infrastructure or machinery... but we are extremely proud because our contribution to the environment is real."

Representatives of nearly 200 nations are gathered in South Korea to agree on a landmark deal to curb plastic pollution that litters the planet.

Just nine percent of plastic is currently recycled globally.

But estimates suggest over half of what is recycled is recovered by waste pickers.

Johnson Doe joined the sector at 16 in Ghana's capital Accra.

"There was no formal job around, so the only work to do was to be a waste picker," he told AFP.

Every day, the 39-year-old waits for waste trucks to arrive at one of the city's dumps so he can collect recyclable items for sale to an intermediary.

He earns three dollars a day on average, "enough to sustain myself", he said.

After more than two decades in the job, plastic no longer holds any secrets for him.


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