
Zimbabwe's scrap metal hunters fight climate change a piece at a time
Mabhiza joined in. For the next several hours, he scoured the sites around Harare, using a stick or his bare hands to sift through piles of filth, from discarded diapers to broken appliances. By midday, his pushcart was full. Springs from old mattresses, car parts, tin cans — it all added up to 66 kilograms (145 pounds) of salvaged metal.
The haul earned him $8. It's enough to feed his five children for the day, maybe even cover a utility bill in a country where the majority of people survive through informal work.
'I have given up looking for a formal job,' the 36-year-old said. 'You walk the industrial areas all day and come back with nothing. This is my job now. I pay rent, my children eat and go to school.'
Across Harare, thousands like Mabhiza live off scrap metal. Quietly, they are helping to sustain a cleaner environment and combat climate change.
Making steel relies heavily on burning highly polluting coal, and the industry accounts for nearly 8% of the carbon dioxide emissions that come from the energy sector and contribute to Earth's warming, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD. It takes less energy to turn scrap metal into new steel, so the pickers are helping reduce carbon emissions with their work in addition to cleaning up metals that would otherwise pollute the city.
1,000 tons of waste per day
Harare generates about 1,000 tons of waste every day, most of which goes uncollected, according to the city council. People and companies frustrated with erratic collection dump trash on roadsides and open spaces. They sometimes burn it. Once-pristine neighborhoods have become polluted eyesores.
Recently, the city council partnered with a green energy waste management company to improve collection amid contested accusations of corruption. But for now, informal pickers like Mabhiza remain indispensable.
'It's a dirty job, yes, but people rarely understand how important it is,' said Fungai Mataga, who runs a scrap metal collection center where Mabhiza and others sell their finds. 'They are society's cleaning crew. Every piece of metal they bring here is one less item polluting our land.'
Globally, this kind of scrap metal is vital to the steel industry, accounting for roughly a third of metallic raw materials used in steel production, according to the OECD.
With growing concerns over the environmental impact of mining and rising interest in circular economies, demand for recycled materials is increasing.
Informal pickers are the 'unsung heroes,' said Joyce Machiri, head of the mining and extractives program at the Zimbabwe Environmental Lawyers Association.
'When you look at scrap, no one would actually say, 'Wow, this a good job.' But look at it this way, these are some of the green jobs we are talking about,' Machiri said.
Recycled metal is key for the steel industry
Many steelmakers cannot afford to invest in new, cleaner technologies. That makes scrap recycling a critical — and accessible — alternative.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that recycling steel and tin cans saves 60% to 74% of the energy required to produce them from raw materials.
Although there are no official statistics on the number of scrap metal collectors in Zimbabwe due to the informal nature of their work, they are unmistakable.
In Hopley, a poor township in Harare, they streamed into a dusty open lot where they sell their scrap. Some pushed carts. Others carried sacks on their heads. One woman brought a small plastic bag with just enough metal to earn a few cents to buy vegetables for dinner.
Inside the yard, heaps of junk like old fridges, microwaves, cups, water heater tanks, generators and car engines were weighed on a giant old scale. Workers handed out cash and loaded the metal onto a 30-ton truck destined for a steelmaker that will buy it for between $220 and $260 a ton.
Factories in the southern African country of 16 million people consume about 600,000 tons of scrap metal annually, all locally collected, said Dosman Mangisi, chief operations officer of the Zimbabwe Institute of Foundries, an association of metal casting businesses.
Tough and dangerous job: 'I hope I can afford gloves one day'
The job of hunting scrap metal is grueling and hazardous. Hunters rise before dawn, walking kilometers to scavenge from landfills, industrial zones, homes and roadside dumps. Some sleep near illegal dumpsites, waiting for trucks that unload waste overnight to avoid arrest.
'I have been lucky not to fall sick,' said Lovemore Sibanda, a security guard who collects scrap on his days off. 'But I am always worried. I hope I can afford gloves one day.'
Metal hunters such as Mabhiza and Sibanda have seen it all, from medical waste such as syringes and expired medicines to rotting carcasses of pets such as dogs and cats thrown away by their owners.
'At first, I would lose my appetite for days after seeing things like that,' said Sibanda. 'Now, I am used to it. This is my office. This is where the money is.'
___
___
The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. For global health and development coverage in Africa, the AP receives financial support from the Gates Foundation. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
5 hours ago
- Times
Stop mowing your lawn. It's good for wildlife and your soul
You don't need a peer-reviewed paper and full biodiversity survey to differentiate the two halves of King's College lawn. On one side of Cambridge's most famous back garden, all is as it should be. Immaculate grass sweeps down to the Cam. On the other side there is messiness. The stripes are gone, the grass has grown and a lot else has flourished besides. Like a miniature rainforest, each plant jostles, seeking to poke through the thick canopy. Underground there is, presumably, more disorder — as generations of head gardeners spin in their graves. Let them spin. Quietly, spreading like wind-blown poppy seeds, insinuating itself like yellow rattle, an idea has taken root. What if we tried, occasionally, not mowing our grass? You have probably noticed this trend. There's the public park with long grass at the boundary or weeds growing under trees. There's the roadside verge that used to be a stubbly, yellowed desert, but today rustles bushily in the breeze of passing cars. And, rustling above, there are butterflies. We don't know with great accuracy what is happening to insects. What studies we do have show it's not good. Our springs are increasingly silent, our windscreens increasingly unsplattered. There are many reasons for this, some complex. There is a potential solution that isn't: stop making green monocultures. Most environmental challenges were unavoidable. We would always have burnt fossil fuels and chopped down trees. But the idea that a garden should have a tightly cut lawn? That's a little more idiosyncratic. In the 18th century, Capability Brown, tasked with landscaping the great country homes, sought to model the grazed grass of bucolic idylls. This style, which without sheep required a lot of labour, became aspirational. When the rotary mower did away with the need for scythe-wielding peasants, it became an aspiration the masses could achieve. It is not unreasonable to think you could rerun history and have very different gardens. Is this what is now happening? The fightback began, probably, with No Mow May. Like a horticultural version of Movember, but for bushy lawns rather than upper lips, this scheme by the charity Plantlife has given dads licence to put their feet (and Flymo) up for four weeks. But the real revolution has been civic. Councils, seeing that most unlikely of congruences, virtuousness and thriftiness, have been delighted. Scores officially follow No Mow May. Many have found it convenient to extend into Let It Bloom June. Then, Make The Verges Jolly July has become The Council Is Bust August. Will it work? You don't, as I said, need a biodiversity survey to understand why insects would prefer the wildflowers. But this is Cambridge, there are a lot of fellows at high table to convince and a lot of PhDs on hand to do the convincing. So they did a survey anyway. The results? On the wildflower bit they found 25 times the mass of invertebrates. Above, there were three times as many bats. So, yes, I think the no-mow revolution should continue. But, in truth, I think it should do so because of another species: homo sapiens. Capability Brown got it wrong. Grass is boring. For a truly grand garden that really uplifts the soul, you need a bit of messiness.


The Independent
19 hours ago
- The Independent
Zimbabwe's scrap metal hunters fight climate change a piece at a time
'Any gold in there today?' Ezekiel Mabhiza called to a man hunched over a mound of trash, hoe in hand, rummaging through one of the many illegal dumpsites that scar Zimbabwe's capital. Mabhiza joined in. For the next several hours, he scoured the sites around Harare, using a stick or his bare hands to sift through piles of filth, from discarded diapers to broken appliances. By midday, his pushcart was full. Springs from old mattresses, car parts, tin cans — it all added up to 66 kilograms (145 pounds) of salvaged metal. The haul earned him $8. It's enough to feed his five children for the day, maybe even cover a utility bill in a country where the majority of people survive through informal work. 'I have given up looking for a formal job,' the 36-year-old said. 'You walk the industrial areas all day and come back with nothing. This is my job now. I pay rent, my children eat and go to school.' Across Harare, thousands like Mabhiza live off scrap metal. Quietly, they are helping to sustain a cleaner environment and combat climate change. Making steel relies heavily on burning highly polluting coal, and the industry accounts for nearly 8% of the carbon dioxide emissions that come from the energy sector and contribute to Earth's warming, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD. It takes less energy to turn scrap metal into new steel, so the pickers are helping reduce carbon emissions with their work in addition to cleaning up metals that would otherwise pollute the city. 1,000 tons of waste per day Harare generates about 1,000 tons of waste every day, most of which goes uncollected, according to the city council. People and companies frustrated with erratic collection dump trash on roadsides and open spaces. They sometimes burn it. Once-pristine neighborhoods have become polluted eyesores. Recently, the city council partnered with a green energy waste management company to improve collection amid contested accusations of corruption. But for now, informal pickers like Mabhiza remain indispensable. 'It's a dirty job, yes, but people rarely understand how important it is,' said Fungai Mataga, who runs a scrap metal collection center where Mabhiza and others sell their finds. 'They are society's cleaning crew. Every piece of metal they bring here is one less item polluting our land.' Globally, this kind of scrap metal is vital to the steel industry, accounting for roughly a third of metallic raw materials used in steel production, according to the OECD. With growing concerns over the environmental impact of mining and rising interest in circular economies, demand for recycled materials is increasing. Informal pickers are the 'unsung heroes,' said Joyce Machiri, head of the mining and extractives program at the Zimbabwe Environmental Lawyers Association. 'When you look at scrap, no one would actually say, 'Wow, this a good job.' But look at it this way, these are some of the green jobs we are talking about,' Machiri said. Recycled metal is key for the steel industry Many steelmakers cannot afford to invest in new, cleaner technologies. That makes scrap recycling a critical — and accessible — alternative. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that recycling steel and tin cans saves 60% to 74% of the energy required to produce them from raw materials. Although there are no official statistics on the number of scrap metal collectors in Zimbabwe due to the informal nature of their work, they are unmistakable. In Hopley, a poor township in Harare, they streamed into a dusty open lot where they sell their scrap. Some pushed carts. Others carried sacks on their heads. One woman brought a small plastic bag with just enough metal to earn a few cents to buy vegetables for dinner. Inside the yard, heaps of junk like old fridges, microwaves, cups, water heater tanks, generators and car engines were weighed on a giant old scale. Workers handed out cash and loaded the metal onto a 30-ton truck destined for a steelmaker that will buy it for between $220 and $260 a ton. Factories in the southern African country of 16 million people consume about 600,000 tons of scrap metal annually, all locally collected, said Dosman Mangisi, chief operations officer of the Zimbabwe Institute of Foundries, an association of metal casting businesses. Tough and dangerous job: 'I hope I can afford gloves one day' The job of hunting scrap metal is grueling and hazardous. Hunters rise before dawn, walking kilometers to scavenge from landfills, industrial zones, homes and roadside dumps. Some sleep near illegal dumpsites, waiting for trucks that unload waste overnight to avoid arrest. 'I have been lucky not to fall sick,' said Lovemore Sibanda, a security guard who collects scrap on his days off. 'But I am always worried. I hope I can afford gloves one day.' Metal hunters such as Mabhiza and Sibanda have seen it all, from medical waste such as syringes and expired medicines to rotting carcasses of pets such as dogs and cats thrown away by their owners. 'At first, I would lose my appetite for days after seeing things like that,' said Sibanda. 'Now, I am used to it. This is my office. This is where the money is.' ___ ___ The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. For global health and development coverage in Africa, the AP receives financial support from the Gates Foundation. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at


BBC News
20 hours ago
- BBC News
No end in sight for Birmingham bin strike after six months
Student Theo Charlton just cannot believe the "apocalyptic" piles of rubbish that he has seen outside his student housing in the UK's second largest the stench of rotting waste thick in the air, the 21-year-old is concerned whether the rubbish from students moving out will get months since bin strike action began in Birmingham, there is no getting away from it for people living in the Pritchard, from Great Barr, told the BBC she had not been transporting her recycling to the local tip "out of principle", with the 68-year-old storing it inside her home. In further strike action, kerbside green waste and recycling collections have been City Council said it remained committed to resolving the dispute despite its recycling rate of 22.9 % being the lowest of any unitary authority in the country, with the exception of of the Unite union walked out in January over plans to downgrade some roles as part of the city council's attempts to sort out its equal pay all-out indefinite strike was announced in March and a deal to end industrial action has not yet been reached. Ms Pritchard told the BBC she had been collecting her recycling rubbish and storing it indoors since the strike began. Among the growing piles of neatly stored cardboard, papers and blister packs, she said if the strike went on any longer, she would "learn to live with it". She said: "I don't drive. On principle I refuse to allow my friends to use their time to take my rubbish to the tip, so I've left it in the house."I've always been a keen recycler and I hate wasted resources. "[If the strike continues] I'll find somewhere else, I'll store it in the shed I'll ask a friend - I'll find a home for it." At his hub for student housing, Mr Charlton told the BBC that when students moved out for the summer, mountains of rubbish were left behind. He said: "The other day I was looking at everyone moving out and it was apocalyptic the amount of rubbish [they left behind]."People don't prepare for leaving, they just dump so much stuff. I thought to myself that's going to be there for ages, its not going to get collected."The 21-year-old said that, as he did not drive, he was unable to get to a recycling point. Fellow student Dan Savill echoed the concerns. The 20-year-old, who is moving to university for his final year, said he was still making an effort to separate his recycling, even though the collections had been "selective". He also said that as recycling was not being collected, people were putting that rubbish in with the black bin collections."There's rubbish in both bins not being taken. The priority at this point should be taking everything somewhere. Ideally recycling - but all of the general waste should be gone first." Councillor Izzy Knowles said people living in flats in Moseley had little to no recycling facilities."The recycling is totally full up. It's getting contaminated. [Some] don't have cars, even if they go to the tip they're not allowed in as pedestrians."The Liberal Democrat councillor said the council should be organising recycling trucks and garden waste trucks at mobile household waste centres. Birmingham City Council said it was focused on delivering a "transformation" of waste collection services which would boost their recycling rates. If it does not meet the government's target rate of 65% by 2035, it could face a reduction in grant funding. Councillor Majid Mahmood said: "This is a service that needs to be transformed to one that citizens of Birmingham deserve."The council remains committed to resolving the industrial action in the best interest of all parties involved." Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.