In Indonesia, commuters pay for the bus with plastic waste

Authored by asiancorrespondent.com and submitted by WSchultz
image for In Indonesia, commuters pay for the bus with plastic waste

RESIDENTS of Indonesia’s second largest city Surabaya can now pay for the bus in a novel way – by trading in used plastic.

The city’s mayor Tri “Risma” Rismaharini last month announced the roll out of the new Suroboyo Bus, comfortable, air-conditioned buses which are, importantly, accessible for disabled, elderly and pregnant passengers.

While the buses might be shiny and new, passengers are invited to pay for their rides not just with money, but with plastic they turn in at designated bus stops and recycling stations around the city.

SEE ALSO: How are Asian countries tackling plastic pollution?

“Passengers can travel around Surabaya for two hours for free,” Risma said as quoted by Indonesia’s Antara News agency. The government seeks to reduce private vehicles – which currently consist of 75 percent of traffic on the roads – to 50/50 with public transportation.

Indonesia produces 187.2 million tonnes of plastic waste each year, making it the second biggest marine polluter in the world behind only China.

Surabaya’s government intends to process the plastic into useful goods. “This is our commitment in handling plastic waste that cannot be destroyed for hundreds of years,” added Risma.

Back in 2015, Risma was recognised as one of the world’s best mayors “for energetically promoting her social, economic and environmental policies in Indonesia’s second-largest city.”

SEE ALSO: Australian supermarkets to phase out plastic bags in 2018, but not all happy

The previous year, she closed down one of Southeast Asia’s largest red-light district known as Dolly and turned much of the area into kindergartens and playgrounds.

Risma has also overseen the establishment of public parks in a number of unused public spaces which provide WiFi, libraries and sport facilities.

Indonesia has also trialled building roads out of recycled plastic, rolling them out in Surabaya along Jakarta and Bekasi.

ArthurRemington on September 3rd, 2018 at 16:00 UTC »

Bus driver, selling ticket: "Paper or plastic?"

Strawberry_Poptart on September 3rd, 2018 at 15:59 UTC »

I wonder if something like that would work here. Like a kiosk where you get a little debit card, and then when you deposit recyclables, or trash/beach litter, it pays the debit card.

This could have huge potential in areas with high homeless populations, especially if a few hours of collecting trash would pay them enough to buy meals for the day.

It could even be a progressive reward system where they get paid more after X lbs of litter is deposited.

dirtywang on September 3rd, 2018 at 15:55 UTC »

Interesting idea... although I would hate to be the bus driver who has to store all of that plastic somewhere constantly during their shift and have to establish how much plastic is enough for a fare.