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Today's Paper | May 18, 2024

Published 09 Apr, 2024 07:43am

Malaysian state turns Ramazan food waste into fertiliser

KUANTAN: After breaking their Ramazan fast outside a mosque in Malaysia, people throw their leftovers into a machine that converts the food scraps into organic fertiliser for crops.

The modest government initiative in the central state of Pahang aims to reduce wastage, especially during the holy month when huge amounts of food are thrown away daily.

The mobile machine has been deployed at a park in the heart of state capital Kuantan during Ramazan where many families gather every evening to feast on cheap local dishes after a day of fasting.

It processes 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of scraps a day, said Sharudin Hamid, the state director of Solid Waste and Public Cleansing Management Corpo­ration, which started the pilot project last year.

The amount is a tiny fraction of the more than 13,000 tonnes of food sent to landfills around the country every day, even more during Ramazan.

“The main objective is to ensure that the waste is not sent to landfills,” Sharudin said. “This has had a significant impact on us, as people are becoming more aware of environmental conservation, especially in terms of food waste reduction.”

Food scraps are thrown into the mac­h­ine where they are slowly mixed with rice husks and sawdust for 48 hours.

The brownish-coloured waste is then packaged and given to farmers to use as fertiliser on their crops.

“Things that grow from that fertiliser can also become food, which again can be composted into fertiliser. So there’s a natural cycle,” said Abdul Shukor Mohamad Salleh, 27, as he bought local delicacies at a Ramazan food market in Kuantan, one of many across the country.

Published in Dawn, April 9th, 2024

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