Skarreling for Scrap: a case study of informal waste recycling at the Coastal Park landfill in Cape Town

By:
Christoph Peter Huegel
Date:
  • Title: Skarreling for Scrap: a case study of informal waste recycling at the Coastal Park landfill in Cape Town
  • Resource Title: Skarreling for Scrap: a case study of informal waste recycling at the Coastal Park landfill in Cape Town

A widespread phenomenon on dumpsites in the developing world, subsistence waste picking is also a common practice at the city-owned Coastal Park Landfill (CPL) in Muizenberg. Poor unemployed people from the townships of Capricorn, Vrygrond and Hillview, situated at the foot of the tip ―skarrel for scrap‖ every day. The word skarreling is an Afrikaans term meaning to rummage or scrabble, scuttle or scurry. Thus, if one talks of ―skarreling for scrap‖, it generally refers to poor people trying to eke out a living by looking for recyclables in the waste that can be put to personal use or turned into money. In the two decades since the transition to democracy, South Africa and the City of Cape Town (CCT) have formulated a number of framework and subordinate policies which express their commitment to sustainable development (SD). SD aims to achieve a balance between its three components, economic, environmental and social sustainability. Thus, SD is not only about increased economic efficiency and stability, while at the same time reducing pollution and handling natural resources more thoughtfully; it is also about promoting social equity by reducing poverty and empowering the poor.

 

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Occupational group
Informal Economy Theme
Language