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Wanda, Panama’s water-powered trash collector, keeps plastic and waste out of mangroves and seas
A gigantic hydraulic and solar-powered machine called Wanda collects plastic waste accumulated at the Juan Diaz River in Panama City on October 1, 2024. In two years, a gigantic hydraulic machine in a river in Panama City has prevented 256 tonnes of rubbish, mainly plastic bottles, from ending up in the mangroves of the Panamanian capital. — AFP pic

PANAMA CITY, Oct 11 — A trash-collecting machine powered by a water wheel and solar panels has prevented hundreds of tonnes of plastic and other garbage from Panama from littering mangroves and the ocean.

All kinds of trash flow down rivers running through Panama City and end up on the coastline of the Central American nation.

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To combat the pollution, the nonprofit Marea Verde Foundation installed a machine called Wanda two years ago to collect and separate trash for recycling.

"We’ve captured 256,000 kilos of waste that would be in the mangroves and sea if it had not been for Wanda,” said Laura Gonzalez, the foundation’s executive director.

The garbage is stopped by a barrier across the Juan Diaz River that runs through Panama City before several workers separate the waste, which is sent by a long conveyor belt to a huge container to be recycled.

Aerial view of ‘Wanda,’ a gigantic hydraulic and solar-powered machine that collects garbage from the Juan Diaz River to prevent it from reaching the sea in Panama City, taken on October 1, 2024. — AFP pic

Wanda also has solar panels in case the hydropower system that harnesses the energy of the river current fails.

No other river in Panama has a similar system, so tonnes of garbage continue to reach the sea.

The country’s coastal mangroves are a vital resting place for hundreds of thousands of migratory birds, but pollution and urban growth pose a serious threat.

Experts estimate that 30 per cent of Panama City’s garbage goes uncollected, and that around 100,000 tonnes of the country’s waste end up in the sea every year.

When it rains, rising waters carry away garbage that is often dumped on riverbanks in slums of the city of 1.4 million people.

"We’re working hard every day to ensure that this waste does not reach the shore,” Ezequiel Vargas, leader of the crew that operates Wanda, told AFP.

"Sadly, the garbage arrives constantly every day,” he said.

An employee of the NGO ‘Marea Verde’ walks over a conveyor belt of the gigantic hydraulic and solar-powered machine called ‘Wanda’ that collects garbage from the Juan Diaz River in Panama City on October 1, 2024. — AFP pic

‘Environmental disaster’

Uncollected garbage litters the streets and residential areas of Panama City and its surrounding areas, while on the coast, there are piles of all kinds of waste.

Environment Minister Juan Carlos Navarro called the state of the rivers an "environmental disaster” in July when he took office.

"We cannot continue polluting our rivers and seas,” he said.

According to a report by the United Nations Environment Programme, Panama City generates around 2,300 tonnes of garbage every day, of which 30 per cent—mostly plastics—ends up in rivers, on the coast and in the sea.

Some 61,500 tonnes of solid waste from Panamanian cities reach the sea every year through sewers and drains, it said.

Plastic wastes accumulated in the Juan Diaz River are seen in Panama City on October 1, 2024. — AFP pic

The trash captured by Wanda includes plastic bottles, shampoo containers and footballs.

"It’s crazy. We received a plastic unicorn a few days ago,” Gonzalez said.

According to Marea Verde, there are eight other similar facilities around the world, including one in the US city of Baltimore, but Wanda is the only one of its kind in Latin America.

It began operating in September 2022 and captured 130 tonnes of waste in its first year.

But the amount of rubbish dumped in the river continues to increase.

"This year we will probably exceed what we collected in the first year,” Gonzalez said. — AFP

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