BRAZIL-ART/POLLUTION Rio makes trash into 'art' to dramatise Olympian bay cleanup task
Record ID:
217091
BRAZIL-ART/POLLUTION Rio makes trash into 'art' to dramatise Olympian bay cleanup task
- Title: BRAZIL-ART/POLLUTION Rio makes trash into 'art' to dramatise Olympian bay cleanup task
- Date: 24th March 2015
- Summary: RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL (FILE) (REUTERS) RUBBISH FLOATING IN THE SURFACE OF THE WATER IN GUANABARA BAY DEAD FISH FLOATING ON A TYRE IN THE WATER SHOES AND OTHER RUBBISH WASHED UP AT THE BANKS OF THE BAY AERIAL OF THE BAY AERIAL OF A SAILING BOAT AND A MOTORBOAT IN THE BAY VARIOUS AERIALS OF THE BAY
- Embargoed: 8th April 2015 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Brazil
- Country: Brazil
- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVABVJB9LIGG9MAF5GOYLNOHIBY0
- Story Text: A deflated football - 16,000 U.S. dollars. A broken computer with wires showing - $60,000. A cracked, yellow plastic chair - $16,000. An old, stained backpack - $8,000.
The items may not actually be for sale in the luxury shopping mall in Rio de Janeiro where they are displayed, but the prices reflect the environmental cost of waste thrown into the city's picturesque Guanabara Bay.
As project director, Fernanda Cortez explained, the exhibition Achados da Guanabara, or Found in Guanabara, seeks to personalize the pollution of the bay to force people to take responsibility for the waste that is thrown into the water.
"The rubbish that we see here comes down to the citizen's responsibility. They were discarded in incorrect ways and ended up being disposed of in the bay, even if they were not directly thrown away there. A lot has been said about the Guanabara Bay as a polemical area, which is why we chose to do "Found in Guanabara" instead of "Found in -" another bay, another sea, another river. This is to show that we are facing a great structural problem in terms of sanitation, but also that there is a big problem in terms of educating the population that water is not rubbish," Cortez told Reuters at the designer Shopping Leblon mall in Rio's wealthy South Zone.
As part of its Olympic bid, Rio promised to clean up 80 percent of the bay in time for the Games in 2016 but local government officials have already admitted this goal is no longer achievable.
Despite millions of dollars of investment over the years, the bay where the Olympic sailing and windsurfing will take place, still stinks of sewage and sailors who visited the city for test events complained of a floating sofa and a dead dog in the water.
For Cortez and the Menos1Lixo (one less piece of rubbish) project, the clean-up of the bay needs greater public awareness as well as government support.
"Our idea is to bring attention to this issue by putting these items on "sale". It is a false sale, the items are not really being sold, but the price on them is the price of these objects for nature, if it were to undo the damage of these unwanted presents," said Cortez
The "prices" for the pieces of rubbish were calculated by biologist Marcelo Szpilman who estimated that for every year it takes an item to decompose its costs the environment 1000 Brazilian reales (320 U.S. dollars).
Cortez said Menos1Lixo is in discussions with the International Olympic Committee to work together to raise awareness of the damage caused by disposing of waste in the bay.
Passers-by seemed moved to cooperate too, recognising the risks for the local environment and for the Games.
"I think we have to make a gigantic effort because I doubt that our government is willing to stretch itself to such an extent. So I do not know if we are going to be ready to use this space in the Olympics," said Gabriel Santiago, after contemplating a broken toilet base valued at 100,000 reales ($32,000). - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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