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Abstract(s)
São Tomé and Principe archipelago in West Africa is a Small Island Developing State facing acute waste management problems. This
article describes the implementation of selective collection of biowaste combined with composting in São Tomé, as a case-study of
an innovative action in the framework of a Small Island Developing State. Collection was designed to gather 225 ty–1, targeting nondomestic biowaste producers, namely local businesses, municipal markets and municipal green waste. A municipal composting plant
was built using basic facilities and windrow composting. The total investment amounted to €50,000, mainly supported by external
aid. Biowaste producers reacted very positively, source segregating enthusiastically. Irregular service – collection collapsed each
time the old vehicle was repaired – together with political disengagement and unmotivated work force were the major constrains.
Biowaste was intermittently delivered to the composting plant and yielded 2 t of compost from July to December 2013 and 10 t during
2014. Compost was sold as organic fertiliser to a touristic resource, to small farmers and to gardeners, at a market price slightly below
production costs, meaning the process is not economically sustainable without support. Nevertheless, biowaste is one of the few waste
fractions (other than glass) that can be turned into a product that has both market value and a real demand, showing the enormous
potential of composting source-separated biowaste in this part of the world.
Description
Keywords
Small island developing state Waste management Composting Biowaste Developing country Separate collection Africa
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Publisher
SAGE