Moga Five quintal of sugar for five quintal of household waste plastic. This is the ‘sweet barter’ that 3,200-odd residents of Ransih Kalan, a village about 30km from district headquarters, indulged into on October 21, as part of their efforts to get rid of plastic waste, a source of ever-lasting pollution and untold misery.
Finally, the first such camp was held with Singh’s mother as the sarpanch. The villagers were told around two months ago, with the complete plan for the camp firmed up around a month back. For the record, sugar costs around ₹40 per kg, while the plastic collected will be sold to a private Ludhiana-based firm ‘Parivartan’ at ₹10/kg for recycling.
Singh added that four philanthropists — Rupinderdeep Singh, Harnek Singh, Jagseer Singh and Manjinder Singh — helped them fund the cost of sugar of around ₹2 lakh.
“We will hold a camp every two months to give the villagers enough time to store plastic waste at home. At the next camp, we plan to offer jaggery, rice and wheat. To get children to actively participate, we will offer them books in exchange for empty packets of chips and other such eatables,” Singh added.
This news has not been edited by Apni Kheti staff but has been published by various news feeds
Source: Hindustan Times