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ENVIRONMENT

EXPLAINED: Why and how to start a zero-waste lifestyle in Germany

With zero-waste markets found in the majority of cities across the country, Germany is a good place to try embracing a reduced-waste or plastic-free lifestyle. We take a look at Germany's waste reduction efforts, and where you can shop to reduce the amount of trash you bring home.

interior of a zero-waste store
Inside a zero-waste store in Berlin. First opened in 2013, Original Unverpackt was one of Germany's first zero-waste stores, and has since opened a number of locations across the country. Photo by Original Unverpackt / Katja Vogt

Germany has earned a reputation for being a world leader in recycling – with a recycling rate of about 65 percent, it leads the world in preventing waste from going straight to the landfill.

That said, the average German still produces a lot of waste each year, significantly more than the average EU resident. According to Germany’s Statistics Office (Destatis), the municipal waste per inhabitant in Germany amounted to a total of 620 kilograms in 2021. The EU average per inhabitant during that year was 527 kilograms.

Why reduce waste?

Reducing waste has an impact on land use by cutting down the amount of material that needs to be sent to landfills. It also saves energy resources, because whether waste is recycled, incinerated or sent to a landfill, all of that takes energy.

READ ALSO: The complete guide to recycling in Germany

Limiting your consumption of certain types of waste can also be a benefit to your health. For example, cutting down the amount of plastic-wrapped food and drinks you consume may reduce your exposure to certain toxins.

Research sponsored by the World Wildlife Fund, and conducted at The University of Newcastle, found that on average people are ingesting 5 grams of plastic each week – the equivalent of eating a credit card. 

The study also suggested that the largest source of plastic ingestion is through water. Another recent study, found that microplastic particles in bottled drinking water were 10 to 100 times more than previously estimated.

Plastics, and many of the chemical additives within them, are known to be toxic. The direct health impacts of ingesting plastics are still not well understood, but researchers tend to agree that plastic exposure isn’t advisable. 

If you’d like to limit your own exposure, reducing the amount of food and drinks you consume that are packaged in plastic is probably the best way to start.

mountain of plastic in a landfill

A scavenger trudges through a mountain of plastic waste in a landfill in Jakarta, Indonesia. Some of the Germany’s plastic waste that cannot be recycled is exported to landfills in foreign countries such as this one. Photo by Yasuyoshi CHIBA / AFP

Where you can shop to reduce waste

Buying foods in bulk, and carrying them home your own reusable containers, is a great way to start reducing waste. 

Some grocery stores in Germany, especially organic stores, offer some grains, flours and other dried items in bulk bins. There are also specialty stores, like Vom Fass, that offer oils, vinegar, liquors and other liquids on tap.

But for a more comprehensive waste-free grocery selection, seek out your local zero-waste (unverpackt) store.

This map on the Wasteland Rebel blog shows zero-waste markets and shops across Germany, and you can also scroll down for maps in a few other surrounding countries.

Germany’s ‘zero-waste’ leader in the North

Kiel is the first German city to be called a “zero-waste” city by Zero Waste Europe

To be clear, the designation doesn’t mean that the capital of Schleswig-Holstein has entirely eliminated waste from the city. But it’s adopted a comprehensive plan to reduce waste at a municipal level.

READ ALSO: German Edeka store legitimises ‘dumpster-diving’ to reduce food waste

Among the plan’s major components are a ban on single-use items at public institutions, installing more drinking fountains across the city, teaching children about waste in school, and trialling a “pay as you throw” program where people are charged only for what is thrown in their mixed waste bin.

The city’s zero-waste focus seems to have inspired individuals to launch interesting projects of their own to help reduce waste and clean things up. As reported by NDR, a former hairdresser launched a project to collect hair from salons to be used to filter oily pollution from the city’s waterways.

Individual actions add up to systemic change

Germany still has a long way to go in terms of reducing waste overall, but there are lessons to be learned from the country’s waste management efforts.

One such lesson is that positive individual actions – such as Germans’ seriousness about properly sorting and recycling waste – really adds up across a large population. 

READ ALSO: Five ways Germany makes you greener (without even noticing)

With that in mind, any additional changes you can make on a personal level are certainly worth doing. Along with buying in bulk as much as possible, carrying a reusable water bottle instead of buying plastic ones and using mesh bags for produce are both good habits for reducing waste.

Additionally, its worth making an effort to upcycle, gift, or sell items like clothes that are still have some life left. When it comes to clothing in particular, Germany has a ‘throwaway culture.’ Rather than throwing clothes out, you may want to try selling them on a second-hand exchange platform like Vinted or Kleinanzeigen. Reselling, or gifting clothes directly, tends to be a more sustainable choice than dropping them in donation bins because many ‘donated’ clothes ultimately end up in landfills.

Find more apps related to sustainable living in Germany at Recyclist Magazine.

Find more tips and tricks for zero-waste living in the Wasteland Rebel blog.

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ENVIRONMENT

Climate protesters under fire in France, Germany, France and UK: UN expert

Environmental activists are increasingly facing hostility across Europe, a UN expert said, warning that the very right to protest was "at risk" in countries usually considered beacons of democracy.

Climate protesters under fire in France, Germany, France and UK: UN expert

Michel Forst, the UN special rapporteur on environmental defenders, told AFP in an interview this week that he was deeply troubled by the hardening tone against climate activists in countries including France, Austria, Germany and Britain.

Government ministers have been throwing about terms like “eco terrorists” and “Green Talibans” to describe non-violent activists, he claimed, also blaming some media reporting for contributing to an increasingly hostile
public attitude.

“It creates a sort of chilling effect,” warned Forst, an independent expert appointed under the UN’s Aarhus Convention — a legally-binding text that provides for justice in environmental matters.

“Currently, the right to protest is at risk in Europe.”

Forst said he had recently visited several European countries after receiving complaints that activists faced treatment that allegedly violated the convention and international human rights law.

Following a visit to Britain, he publicly voiced alarm at the “toxic discourse” and “increasingly severe crackdown” on environmental defenders.

 ‘Regressive laws’ 

Forst charged that “regressive laws” in Britain were being used to slap climate activists with harsh penalties, with one activist sent to prison for six months for a 30-minute slow march disrupting traffic.

Another activist had been sentenced to 27 months behind bars in the UK, he said.

He also decried harsh sentences in other countries, including Germany.

Forst travelled to France last month following complaints about a crackdown on a drawn-out anti-motorway protest near the southwestern city of Toulouse.

Activists, called “squirrels”, who have been squatting in trees destined to be chopped down to make way for the A69 motorway, have accused law enforcement of denying them access to food and water and using floodlights to deprive them of sleep.

Forst said he had been blocked from bringing food to the activists, and was “shocked” by what he found.

“Obviously, deprivation of food, of drinking water, of sleep is clearly against international law,” said Forst, a French national.

They are “considered acts of torture in international texts”, he added. 

Dangerous

Forst said that European media coverage often focuses exclusively on the drama around demonstrations and not on the climate crisis prompting the protests.

The world is in a very “dangerous time”, he said, but the general public often do not understand why young people are “blocking access to airports, or gluing their hands on the floor”.

As a result, states have felt justified in developing new policies and laws, paving the way for police crackdowns, and increasingly harsh sentences.

In Britain, he said that some judges were even barring environmental defenders from using the word “climate” to explain their motivation to the jury.

Forst said that he was investigating whether big companies, especially in the oil and energy sector, might be lobbying to increase the pressure on climate activists.

“The most dangerous” companies were even “using security forces, connections with the mafia… to target and sometimes to kill defenders,” he said.

Forst said he was currently organising consultations in Latin America and Africa with environmental activists there who are facing attacks by companies.

He is also investigating whether companies based in Europe are, through local subsidiaries, contributing to attacks on activists.

And the expert blasted European countries for “a double standard” by supporting environmental defenders in other parts of the world but “not protecting their defenders inside Europe”.

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