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Difference between revisions of "Environmental Initiative Merah Putihi Hijau"

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{{PageSponsor}}
 
{{PageSponsor}}
 
{{Environmental Initiative
 
{{Environmental Initiative
|Name of Initiative=Merah Putihi Hijau
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|Name of Initiative=Merah Putih Hijau
 
|Initiative category=Pengelolaan Sampah,
 
|Initiative category=Pengelolaan Sampah,
 
|Initiative category id=Pengelolaan Sampah,
 
|Initiative category id=Pengelolaan Sampah,
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Indonesia’s about 50 million ton of organic waste per year contribute about 11 % to the country’s greenhouse gas emissions or even 21 % when peat and forest fires are excluded. Controlled decomposition of organic waste would contribute significantly to the national goal of reducing greenhouse gasses 29 % by 2030, compared to “business as usual”.
 
Indonesia’s about 50 million ton of organic waste per year contribute about 11 % to the country’s greenhouse gas emissions or even 21 % when peat and forest fires are excluded. Controlled decomposition of organic waste would contribute significantly to the national goal of reducing greenhouse gasses 29 % by 2030, compared to “business as usual”.
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|Initiative matter id=Karena program ini mampu mengurangi sampah ke TPA hingga 90% dan hal ini membantu mengembalikan ekosistem dan keanekaragaman hayati kita.
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Sebanyak 50juta ton/tahun sampah organik di Indonesia berkontribusi sekitar 11% terhadap emisi gas rumah kaca nasional, bahkan 21% jika lahan gambut dan kebakaran hutan tidak diperhitungkan. Dekomposisi sampah organik yang terkontrol akan berkontribusi signifikan terhadap tujuan nasional untuk mengurangi gas rumah kaca sebesar 29% pada tahun 2030, dibandingkan dengan 'business as usual'.
 
|Initiative positive contribution=10 years of lessons learned from Temesi Recycling, UN Showcase Award, several news articles, daily monitoring and measuring of waste to landfill, of CO2 reductions, of composting results, of plastics recycled,!
 
|Initiative positive contribution=10 years of lessons learned from Temesi Recycling, UN Showcase Award, several news articles, daily monitoring and measuring of waste to landfill, of CO2 reductions, of composting results, of plastics recycled,!
 
   
 
   
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www.temesirecycling.com ; www.mph-bali.org ; www.bumisasmaya.org
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|Initiative positive contribution id=Sepuluh tahun pelajaran dari Temesi Recycling, UN Showcase Award, beberapa artikel berita, pemantauan harian dan pengukuran limbah ke TPA, pengurangan CO2, hasil pengomposan, plastik yang didaur ulang!
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www.temesirecycling.com ; www.mph-bali.org ; www.bumisasmaya.org
 
www.temesirecycling.com ; www.mph-bali.org ; www.bumisasmaya.org
 
|Initiative photos={{Environmental Initiative/Photo
 
|Initiative photos={{Environmental Initiative/Photo

Revision as of 04:44, 30 May 2019

MPH-Separation-Is-The-Key.jpg
Name of environmental initiative
Merah Putih Hijau
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Additional Photos

MPH-Waste-Facility-Bali.jpg

Description

The opportunity costs of pursuing any thermic waste treatment in Indonesia are huge (negative energy balance, loss of essential organic matter and pollution). No major economies of scale exist for processing by biological decomposition. On the contrary, increased logistic cost and other reasons call for a far-reaching decentralization.

Building community owned sorting and composting facilities will lead to the enforcement of rules in waste management and it will restore our soils and save future ecosystems and biodiversity. All of this can be achieved while saving the government hundreds of millions $ US in waste management costs. The largest operating costs are labor and logistics. Both can be dramatically reduced and improved by building community owned waste management facilities.

The Indonesian government supports this approach and is asking communities to establish a BUMDES Badan Usaha Milik Desa; Community owned enterprise. The BUMDES can own and operate a community waste management faciliity. Models in Pererenan and Baturiti show that revenue can quickly grow to 5,000$ US per month.


Why does the innovation or project matter?

Because it actually reduces waste to landfill by up to 90% and it helps restore our future ecosystems and biodiversity. Indonesia’s about 50 million ton of organic waste per year contribute about 11 % to the country’s greenhouse gas emissions or even 21 % when peat and forest fires are excluded. Controlled decomposition of organic waste would contribute significantly to the national goal of reducing greenhouse gasses 29 % by 2030, compared to “business as usual”.


How do you or your team know that the innovation or project is working (or making a positive contribution)?

10 years of lessons learned from Temesi Recycling, UN Showcase Award, several news articles, daily monitoring and measuring of waste to landfill, of CO2 reductions, of composting results, of plastics recycled,! www.temesirecycling.com ; www.mph-bali.org ; www.bumisasmaya.org


What has contributed to the innovation or project working?


What else would help the innovation or project be more successful?


Is the innovation or project self-sustaining? If not, what needs to be done for that to happen?


What Balinese value does this initiative invoke?


People/groups to contact

Sean Nino - nino@eco-mantra.com