Melange Travel & Lifestyle Magazine July 2020 | Page 132

This is a glass recycling and plastic reduction initiative supported by Scuba Montserrat Dive Shop and the Darwin Initiative. Glass is collected from local businesses and residents on the island, and it is then crushed, on-island. The initiative started March 2019 with glass bottles being collected from events during the island’s St. Patrick’s Day festival. The Eco Montserrat team also started giving bags to local bars & restaurants which these businesses would use to collect bottles and some were given large grey bins into which the contents of the bags would be put. The next step was to add residential drop points, so areas were created where locals could drop off their glass products which would then be collected. Crushed glass is currently being given away to people for use in art and crafts projects and as building material. The project team want people to experiment with it and find uses for it. Montserrat is an island, therefore a lot of their trash is burned. The project team realized that over 100,000,000 bottles were being thrown away each year and the Dive Shop team were picking up many of these under the sea on their dives. Also as other countries started to ban plastic bags, they realized that Montserrat had not even started the conversation on the island. “People needed to know what plastic alternatives might look like, why things like Styrofoam and taking a plastic bag to carry a candy bar is bad for our environment and us as humans. So we started recyling the glass and this year our big push is the plastics,” said Eco Montserrat. “We are bringing in paper and metal straws, bamboo