Project STOP (Stop Ocean Plastics) initiated in Indonesia aims to create a low-cost, circular, replicable and zero-leakage waste management system in collaboration with households, institutions, local initiatives and informal waste workers. It was piloted in April 2018 in Muncar, Indonesia and further expanded to Jembrana, Pasuruan and Banyuwagi.
The project was introduced to address the issue of open and haphazard disposal of waste in the absence of a formal waste management system. It works in alignment to the principle of self-sufficiency and empowers locals to manage their own waste while enabling them to generate profit from it to make the working modality financially sustainable. It supports the local implementation through investments, technical expertise, waste system design, project management, capacity building and recycling/ reprocessing valorisation.
The primary founders of the initiative are SystemIQ, an ecological business consulting organisation, and Borealis, a plastic production company. The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, NOVA Chemicals, Nestle, the Alliance to End Plastic Waste, Bourouge and Siegwerk, Veolia, Sustainable Waste Indonesia, Schwarz and HP are other integral partners. The Ministry of Environment and Forest, Ministry of National Development Planning, Ministry of Public Works and Public Housing and local governments of the project sites also provide domestic support.
It has four main objectives:
- to achieve zero waste leakage into the environment through regular residential and industrial waste collection
- create circular system by generating opportunities that create value from waste
- achieve economic sustainability through local job opportunities
- create conducive environment for tourism and fishing to flourish locally