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Kenya to introduce colour-coded bins for waste segregation

A heap of waste blocks a section of the busy Huruma Road in Kariobangi North, Nairobi on October 10, 2024. Reckless waste disposal has increasingly affected the city.

Photo credit: Wilfred Nyangaresi I Nation Media Group

What you need to know:

  • CS Duale also dismissed the common perception that informal settlements are a major source of pollution in Nairobi River, saying the real polluters are individuals who, due to their financial means, can afford to purchase new items frequently, thus generating more waste.

In Baku, Azerbaijan 

The government is planning to introduce a colour-coded garbage segregation system as part of its effort to address waste management issues and reduce pollution in Nairobi River. 

The initiative, part of the National Sustainable Waste Management Act of 2022, will require households to separate their waste into three distinct bags: green for organic waste, blue for dry recyclables, and red for hazardous materials.

Speaking in Baku, Azerbaijan, where climate talks - COP29 - are ongoing, Environment and Climate Change Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale outlined the new measures, explaining the government's vision for a cleaner, more sustainable Nairobi. 

“Every person pays for his garbage, am I right?

“And we must find out the person who picks your garbage. The person who picks the garbage from your house must know where he dumps,” he said.

Under the new system, waste collection trucks will be required to follow specific routes and bring their loads to designated Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs), which will handle waste processing according to the type of material.

At the same time, CS Duale dismissed the common perception that informal settlements are a major source of pollution in Nairobi River, saying the real polluters are individuals who, due to their financial means, can afford to purchase new items frequently, thus generating more waste. He pointed out that this trend among middle and upper-class residents, who have a higher purchasing power, leads to increased waste production and ultimately contributes significantly to the pollution of the river.

 “The informal settlements don’t pollute the river,” he stated.

 “The people who pollute the river are the middle class. Garbage is found in the middle class. The people in the informal settlements, everything they have they eat.”

 He added that industries and private waste collectors are also significant contributors to pollution.

The National Environment Management Authority (Nema) recently identified that over 90 per cent of pollution in Nairobi’s rivers originates from industries, slaughterhouses and mismanaged sewage systems. According to Nema, 145 facilities along the Nairobi River basin are discharging industrial effluents into the river, often due to malfunctioning or absent effluent treatment plants. 

Mr Duale reiterated that the facilities have been issued restoration orders, adding that the government is taking a firm stance on compliance.

“If you have a factory, you must show where and whether you are putting in place an affluent system. And I think now they are all complying with our conditions,” said the CS.

Non-compliant industries risk closure if they fail to meet environmental standards - part of an effort to reduce industrial pollution in the river.

The government’s waste management efforts also include a job creation programme targeting youth along Nairobi’s rivers.

Mr Duale highlighted that the initiative is currently employing around 11,000 young people, with plans to increase this to 20,000 and eventually expand to other cities and counties.

“We will go to the other five cities in December and then move to other counties.”

The National Sustainable Waste Management Act aims to shift Nairobi towards a circular economy, a model in which waste is minimised and materials are reused or recycled instead of being discarded.

According to CS Duale, this approach will help reduce landfill waste and make better use of resources, particularly in Nairobi where waste management challenges have mounted.

“We must shift to the circular economy, where part of the garbage can be recycled,” he said.“When you walk to a supermarket, there must be a bin for the organic.”  This means that organic waste, such as food scraps can be collected separately to produce compost or biogas rather than going to landfills. 

Reacting to Mr Duale's statement, Green Peace Africa's Hellen Dena said: "Only about nine per cent of plastic has ever been recycled since the 1950s. Corporations have been irresponsibly shifting the burden of dealing with their distribution design failures onto consumers for far too long. We cannot believe the false claim that individuals can single-handedly sustain our planet by simply recycling the billions of tons of plastics corporations produce. Consumers do not throw away what is valuable."

The government hopes that colour-coded bins in public places will make it easier for residents to separate waste at the source.