• Projekt

Bewertung und Management von Plastikabfallströmen und ihrer Leckagen in Bacolod City, Philippinen

Fischerhafen Bacolod City

Projektzeitraum -

Kontinent Asien

Bundesland Hessen

Partnerland Philippinen

Projektmanagement Gabriele Kohlisch

Projektadministration Elisabeth Zettelmann

Projektstatus Abgeschlossen in BLP 3

5 Geschlechter-Gleichheit
11 Nachhaltige Städte und Gemeinden
12 Nachhaltige/r Konsum und Produktion

Waste management is an essential public service that is often regulated by the government in the Philippines and frequently implemented in partnership with the private sector. Men mostly occupy the upper echelons in roles such as city managers and planners, landfill operators and heads of waste collection companies. Women are more involved in informal household and neighbourhood activities related to waste and waste collection. These activities are usually unpaid or minimally compensated.

Women working in the waste sector often experience poverty and social exclusion, as well as discrimination within the sector itself. According to WIEGO, an international organisation that advocates for women in informal employment, women have more difficult access to high-quality recyclable waste, are paid less than men, and have fewer opportunities to hold higher positions in waste management. WIEGO and other organisations, such as Women of Waste (WOW), a group affiliated with the International Solid Waste Association (ISWA), take the approach that the waste sector offers an opportunity for women in developing countries to empower themselves.

Projekt objective 

The municipal administration of Bacolod City, Philippines, is strengthened in its waste management. Female waste pickers have the opportunity to earn higher incomes.