By Elida Moreno
PANAMA CITY (Reuters) – Latin America’s first renewable-powered, trash-trapping wheel whisks away garbage floating down one of Panama’s most important but heavily polluted rivers before it spills into the Pacific Ocean, thanks to an initiative by a local environmental group.
The wheel, fueled by hydraulic and solar energy, collects the vast amounts of waste produced in the capital Panama City with its metro population of around two million people. Tonnes of trash often flow into the sea each year.
“Cleaning beaches is good, but it is more effective and cheaper to trap garbage in rivers because when it reaches the ocean, the environmental and economic cost becomes too high,” said project leader Robert Getman.
Installed by environmental group Marea Verde, the wheel is named Wanda Diaz, in part a reference to the Juan Diaz river where it spins.
Wanda Diaz launched in late September in a river basin since drenched by heavy rains, which in turn propelled plastic bottles and containers into Wanda’s mechanical arms.
By mid-October, Wanda had collected 22 1.3 cubic meter bags of plastic bottles.
The Juan Diaz river is one of the most polluted in the country due to poor waste management, little regulation of real estate development, and its course across Panama City, one of Central America’s largest cities.
The waterway is nevertheless home to lizards, turtles and birds that live in its mangroves.
Over five years, Marea Verde projects have slowed the spread of trash across Panama’s rivers and coastlines.
Before the coronavirus pandemic struck, the group rolled out its “Barrier or Trash” technology, a floating device that trapped over 100 tonnes of waste in the Matias Hernandez river between 2019 and 2020.
Wanda, inspired and supported by the Baltimore Bay “Trashwheel” in the United States, is fitted with artificial intelligence cameras to categorize different plastics.
“We want to raise awareness that we can prevent the death of this very important river,” said Marea Verde head Sandy Watemberg, expressing optimism that the wheel will help.
But she also pointed to the need for those who much too casually use single-use plastics to rethink their own consumption.
“The most important thing is to achieve a change in habits,” she said.
(Reporting by Elida Moreno; Additional reporting by Diego Ore; Writing by Sarah Morland; Editing by David Alire Garcia and Lincoln Feast.)