<p>The modern economy is built on trash. Worldwide, some 2.5 billion tonnes of waste is generated yearly. A growing global south is expected to contribute annually an additional 1.3 billion tonnes of trash by 2050. None of this is news. The news though is that the waste disposal system is in disarray; recycling is anything but effective; and zero-waste as a concept is yet to catch on. Further, the capitalist market is pushing a culture of planned obsolescence by producing cheaper products with shorter life spans. No wonder, one-third of what is finally dumped has been produced in the same year.</p>.<p>Inspired by India’s $30 billion Swachh Bharat campaign launched in 2014, journalist Oliver Franklin-Wallis set out on an eye-opening journey to unearth the dirty truth about the world of rubbish. From Delhi’s mountainous landfill at Ghazipur to Ghana’s flooded second-hand markets, and from Britain’s vitrified nuclear waste store in Sellafield to an electronics recycling facility in Oklahoma in the US, the author traversed far and wide to understand what has happened, how we got here, and what, if anything, could be done. The overwhelming presence of trash in our daily lives may make many wonder if there is anything new the book offers.</p>.<p><strong>Not just a municipal issue</strong></p>.<p>Wasteland highlights the relentless waste generation and accumulation as an emerging environmental anxiety worth serious attention. With five per cent of all global greenhouse gas emissions contributed by the solid waste industry, the global waste crisis should feature high up in the list of eco-emergencies like heatwaves, floods, and fires. In reality, it doesn’t and continues to be viewed as a municipal issue that needs resources and technology to keep the trash away from sight. The truth is that even after decades of mulling over the matter, rubbish is neither out of sight nor out of mind. Should it not matter that given the wide variety of waste being generated, from plastic to nuclear and from food to packaging, only about 20 per cent of it all gets recycled?</p>.<p>In his shocking but fact-filled narrative, Oliver provides a gripping account of the political economy of waste generation and management. Such is the case that waste always attracts crime, commands substantial profits, requires only the barest trained labour, and naturally deters close scrutiny. The waste industry has profited from this ecosystem where nobody asks questions. In his incredible journey, the author met a great number of ordinary folk who want to make a difference, but like climate change, it is a problem that individual action alone can do little to prevent. Zero waste, meaning, not sending waste to landfills, is a concept yet to gain roots. Perhaps, the world needs an army of zero-waste influencers to have an impact.</p>.<p>Written with eloquence and authority, Oliver peels many layers of the waste crisis, a global problem that democratically affects all of us, be it in the developed or developing world. The author contends that his book is not only about what we throw away but also what is lost in the process. World over, a third of all food we produce is wasted, but some 820 million people go to bed hungry. It is therefore suggested that tackling our waste crisis is more than just removing litter from our rivers and oceans. The world needs to rethink the issue of waste from a wider perspective.</p>.<p><strong>Radical thinking needed</strong></p>.<p>With the limited success in managing and treating waste, it is clear that the world is running out of room to contain its trash. The idea of waste needs radical thinking, suggests Oliver. It means reimagining the industrial system, the one that relies on zero chemical discharge, zero greenhouse gas emissions, and zero waste generation. Such a shift is not easy; it will warrant a whole new way of thinking about things and their uses, about how we define ourselves and our status through commodities, and what we cast away and what we keep in. Nothing less will suffice.</p>.<p>Wasteland is an engaging and disturbing treatise on waste. It looks at the science and sociology, toxicology and politics, economics and technology, and archaeology and business aspects of waste in a single volume.</p>.<p>A comprehensive understanding of a subject as complex as waste is imperative to resolve the crises. Given that our waste is both overwhelming and hopeless at this point in time, Oliver leaves a message for his growing children, ‘this planet is both precious and remarkable, try not to waste it’. The urgency is both loud and clear.</p>
<p>The modern economy is built on trash. Worldwide, some 2.5 billion tonnes of waste is generated yearly. A growing global south is expected to contribute annually an additional 1.3 billion tonnes of trash by 2050. None of this is news. The news though is that the waste disposal system is in disarray; recycling is anything but effective; and zero-waste as a concept is yet to catch on. Further, the capitalist market is pushing a culture of planned obsolescence by producing cheaper products with shorter life spans. No wonder, one-third of what is finally dumped has been produced in the same year.</p>.<p>Inspired by India’s $30 billion Swachh Bharat campaign launched in 2014, journalist Oliver Franklin-Wallis set out on an eye-opening journey to unearth the dirty truth about the world of rubbish. From Delhi’s mountainous landfill at Ghazipur to Ghana’s flooded second-hand markets, and from Britain’s vitrified nuclear waste store in Sellafield to an electronics recycling facility in Oklahoma in the US, the author traversed far and wide to understand what has happened, how we got here, and what, if anything, could be done. The overwhelming presence of trash in our daily lives may make many wonder if there is anything new the book offers.</p>.<p><strong>Not just a municipal issue</strong></p>.<p>Wasteland highlights the relentless waste generation and accumulation as an emerging environmental anxiety worth serious attention. With five per cent of all global greenhouse gas emissions contributed by the solid waste industry, the global waste crisis should feature high up in the list of eco-emergencies like heatwaves, floods, and fires. In reality, it doesn’t and continues to be viewed as a municipal issue that needs resources and technology to keep the trash away from sight. The truth is that even after decades of mulling over the matter, rubbish is neither out of sight nor out of mind. Should it not matter that given the wide variety of waste being generated, from plastic to nuclear and from food to packaging, only about 20 per cent of it all gets recycled?</p>.<p>In his shocking but fact-filled narrative, Oliver provides a gripping account of the political economy of waste generation and management. Such is the case that waste always attracts crime, commands substantial profits, requires only the barest trained labour, and naturally deters close scrutiny. The waste industry has profited from this ecosystem where nobody asks questions. In his incredible journey, the author met a great number of ordinary folk who want to make a difference, but like climate change, it is a problem that individual action alone can do little to prevent. Zero waste, meaning, not sending waste to landfills, is a concept yet to gain roots. Perhaps, the world needs an army of zero-waste influencers to have an impact.</p>.<p>Written with eloquence and authority, Oliver peels many layers of the waste crisis, a global problem that democratically affects all of us, be it in the developed or developing world. The author contends that his book is not only about what we throw away but also what is lost in the process. World over, a third of all food we produce is wasted, but some 820 million people go to bed hungry. It is therefore suggested that tackling our waste crisis is more than just removing litter from our rivers and oceans. The world needs to rethink the issue of waste from a wider perspective.</p>.<p><strong>Radical thinking needed</strong></p>.<p>With the limited success in managing and treating waste, it is clear that the world is running out of room to contain its trash. The idea of waste needs radical thinking, suggests Oliver. It means reimagining the industrial system, the one that relies on zero chemical discharge, zero greenhouse gas emissions, and zero waste generation. Such a shift is not easy; it will warrant a whole new way of thinking about things and their uses, about how we define ourselves and our status through commodities, and what we cast away and what we keep in. Nothing less will suffice.</p>.<p>Wasteland is an engaging and disturbing treatise on waste. It looks at the science and sociology, toxicology and politics, economics and technology, and archaeology and business aspects of waste in a single volume.</p>.<p>A comprehensive understanding of a subject as complex as waste is imperative to resolve the crises. Given that our waste is both overwhelming and hopeless at this point in time, Oliver leaves a message for his growing children, ‘this planet is both precious and remarkable, try not to waste it’. The urgency is both loud and clear.</p>