Recycled trash to fuel Haiti

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Before the recent earthquake, Haiti was no stranger to natural disasters. In recent years, thousands of people have been killed by floods and landslides. To understand why the toll is so high, one need look no further than the country’s bald mountains. Haiti has lost about 97 % of its forests. And the main culprit is the nation’s most popular cooking fuel: charcoal. Reporter Amy Bracken looks at one effort to provide a tree-saving alternative: briquettes made from trash. (photos: Amy Bracken)


It seems an unlikely place for a factory. The spare cement and metal structure sits atop a hill in a Port-au-Prince slum, next to a razor-wire-fringed UN peacekeeping base.



But this Saturday morning the factory is bustling. Wheelbarrows enter the front gate full of trash. At the other end of the floor, they are filled with neat stacks of what look like paper hockey pucks. In between is a low-tech recycling process that turns the neighborhood’s trash into cooking fuel.

Samuel Toussaint is a plant manager.

“We clean the neighborhood every day. We pick up trash, we sort the trash, and then our main activity is making briquettes. Over there, people are preparing materials”

Women sit on plastic buckets shredding wet paper and cardboard with their fingers. A man uses what looks like a giant mortar and pestle to mash the mixture. Others smoosh the paste into metal cylinders to mold it into briquettes, which will be sold as replacements for charcoal.



Most Haitians use charcoal from trees to cook every meal. And the demand for charcoal is destroying the nation’s forests. The hope here is to spare at least some of the trees by providing a cheap and easy alternative.

Ginette Sejour likes the idea. And it’s not just because the mother of seven is happy to have a job here shredding paper. She also feels good about the work.

“The briquettes protect our environment, because when people use these briquettes, fewer trees are cut down, fewer people die.”

The factory started selling briquettes late last year. It’s run by a community group, and funded in part by the UN. Backers hope it eventually can be self-sustaining. But it won’t be just by selling the briquettes, because in order to compete with charcoal, the price is kept artificially low.

Plant manager Samuel Toussaint says the profit will come from the rest of the trash his workers collect.

“We sort metal, and there’s a company that has already come to buy it, and for the plastic, the same company came to buy that, and there’s a lot of plastic. So our objective is to sell metal, plastic and glass to a company that will recycle them.”

Toussaint is also leading an operation to turn organic waste into compost and sell that to farmers.

All of this is providing a big public benefit beyond reducing the demand for charcoal. The neighborhood’s once trash-filled streets and canals are much cleaner, and hundreds of jobs have been created. And its success has brought the project some influential backers.


“This could be done in every neighborhood of Port-au-Prince. It could be done in every city in Haiti.”

Former President Bill Clinton, now the UN’s special envoy to Haiti, held up a sample briquette as he spoke to a crowd of Haitian-Americans in Miami last year.

“…and if it were successful, it would sweep the poor urban areas of the world. This could be done everywhere. Labor intensive, environmentally responsible.”

Plans are in the works to bring the program to other parts of Port-au-Prince, and there’s talk of replicating it across the country.

But old habits die hard, and there’s no guarantee the new fuel will catch on. Factory employees say their briquettes are used the same way as charcoal, heat more quickly, and give food the same taste. But you only have to look outside the factory to know that many people won’t soon change their ways.

Right by the factory’s front gate, there’s a man selling charcoal. 26-year-old Jemel Alcindor has been selling here for years. He says his business is as steady as ever. Not even the earthquake made a dent in it.

And even if the new briquettes do catch on, they will only have a limited impact on the country’s charcoal problem. That’s according to Eric Overvest, of the UN Development Program.

“The briquettes are not a solution for replacing charcoal…. There will not be enough paper and carton to replace charcoal. So it will always be a very small percentage of the total market.”

Which is one reason there are lots of other efforts underway here in Haiti to wean the country off charcoal. But whatever its wider impact, plant manager Samuel Toussaint says the briquette factory has already changed his community.

“We wouldn’t have been able to stand here before without fear. Thanks to the work of this project, the community has transformed. Some of the people who were terrorizing the community, they saw there was no place for them here. Other gang members were integrated into our program.”

Toussaint says because of the project, locals now feel good about where they live. And the men and women toiling here see themselves as part of a movement – one that could give a glimpse of a better Haiti – from cleaner streets to healthier forests.

Deforestation near Port-au-Prince



For The World, I’m Amy Bracken. Port-au-Prince, Haiti.


Discussion

10 comments for “Recycled trash to fuel Haiti”

  • http://www.treeswaterpeople.org jon becker

    This is a great story, a great project. Simultaneously addressing the fuel problem, job creation, neighborhood improvement is an outstanding approach. Trees, Water & People is a non-profit also addressing these kinds of issues. We are helping to bring fuel efficient cookstoves to Haiti, also to reduce the demand for wood and charcoal. This additionally has a profound positive impact on respiratory health, through more efficient and complete burning of combustion gases. We are interested in making contact with the briquette makers, to explore how their product works with our stoves and see how we can support each other’s efforts.

  • http://j.mp/solar-cooker Steven Wright

    I recognize that creating these briquettes is a good alternative to charcoal since it employs people and recycles trash. However, since the factory does not produce enough to replace all the charcoal it would be good to augment the briquettes with something else. For example, a solar cooker (like this one http://j.mp/solar-cooker) would provide a long term solution using a free, non-polluting fuel.

    • Marc Saint Clair

      This alternative seem great but how can they afford a $234 unit with a budget of $2 per day. Out of a max of 260 working days in the year, one working person would have to work for 117 days to buy this unit.

  • yohannes Taye

    I am a regular listener to NPR & PRI. When I heard about your briquette in Haiti story, I said to myself that this would be very useful and applicable to Africa as most of the drought that happens there happens because of deforestation. How can I find out more about this process? Thank you for the good job you try to do for humanity.

  • http://www.classesandcareers.com/ Margo

    I think this is wonderful that a new process has been developed to give Haitians a fuel alternative. It is wonderful that the factory employs people and in turn makes them proud of their town so they will care for it. I do hope that the factory is not being subsidized, so that Haitians can have what they most need – the ability to stand on their own two feet. We need to make sure our aid to Haiti does not cripple them by making them dependent on this aid -or crutch – but that they can stand independent of outside help as much as possible.
    I do hope the problem can be addressed of having the people willing to use the briquettes for cooking, and that reversing the preference for charcoal is being undertaken by someone with a first-hand understanding of the people and their culture so that this issue will be intelligently and effectively addressed.
    The deforestation is also caused by overfarming and poor land rights. Hopefully all these issues will be remedied for the good of the people of Haiti. Meanwhile, it is wonderful that someone had the idea to take an available resource – trash – and turn it into something useful and much needed. Kudos!

  • Tom Fry

    I was in Haiti May 5-9, 2010 and the “trash” is a horrific problem. A substantial portion of it looks like plastic water bottles, at least in the canals. I saw a steam shovel digging out the layers of trash/plastic bottles that are several feet deep. The factory to recycle paper and cardboard into fuel is great. But recycling the water bottles that the Haitians and many of us volunteers use, is important. Even more so, is the mental attitude that must be changed to recycle rather than toss it over their shoulder or into the canal. Yes, kudos to the force behind this factory.

    • http://www.harveylacey.com harvey lacey

      I want to know more about the plastic water problem!!!

      The reason is I’m developing a manual machine the makes building blocks out of plastic trash. The first choice is plastic drinking bottles.

      contact me, my first name at my full name dot com

  • Paula L.

    All of the above comments were very positive. When I visited the Dominican Republic next door to Haiti I found that it is against the law to cut trees. There were military check points on the roads to see if logs or wood was being moved without a permit.

  • Marc

    Can the author(s) kindly provide more information about the company.

  • http://www.recycledplasticblockhouses.com harvey lacey

    It’s been a busy six weeks. We are making the plastic building blocks.

    Some plastic trash is very valuable, #1, #2, and #3 for recycling into new plastic products. $.50 plus per pound at the time of this post.

    One of benefits of the recycled plastic blocks is the more valuable plastics can be sorted and sold to recyclers. The other plastics are then made into blocks.

    My vision is to have facilities like the one in the article also building the recycled plastic blocks.

    One humdred percent of plastic trash would not end up in the landscape and landfills