Gul Bahao’s “Choora Chaara” innovation presented to Minister for Women’s Development Mrs. Tauqeer Fatima Bhutto

Last Saturday Gul Bahao’s Nargis Latif  met the Minister for Women’s Development Mrs. Tauqeer Fatima Bhutto in her office. Nargis gave a presentation of Gul Bahao’s latest projects related to animal feed called “Choora Chaara”  which is being prepared from waste organic material. With the help of slides and photographs, Nargis Latif showed the Minister, the different processes through  which organic waste like vegetable and fruit peels are converted to animal feed in a clean and hygienic manner. This is finally packaged to give it a shelf life of weeks and even months. She said the methodology is simple and cost effective and much superior to what the cattle get at the garbage dumps.

Nargis Latif then gave a detailed presentation of the Chandi Ghar, a low cost housing project. Nargis said that Gul Bahao is planning  a pilot project called “Busti Benazir”  where practical demonstration of Gul Bahao’s innovations would be demonstrated in real life situations. This “busti” would be a pilot project for disaster managment and rehabilitation. The location would be the Kutchi Abadi adjoining thew research center of Gul Bahao opposite Sindbad.

The minister singled out the “Choora Chara” and said it attracted her the most since it could  be a source of  income generation for women sitting at  home. She said that with prices of agriculture related products rising very fast the cheap animal feed would directly help in increasing meat and milk produce. She said that she would talk to the chief minister at the earliest.

In the meantime, Nargis Latif met the Vice Chancellor  of the NED University Mr. Abul Kalaam in his office. Nargis Latif said that Gul Bahaos Research Center located in Gulshan-e-Iqbal  has attracted hundreds of students from NED, Dawood and Karachi University especially those from the Architecture Departments as well as scores of representatives of the local bodies from all over Sindh. She said that some time ago two Directors of the Clinton Foundation Mr. Christopher Godlove and Mr. Alex Hurd met Nargis Latif at the Sheraton Hotel in Karachi and held detailed discussioin with her about Gul Bahao’s work on waste management. Mr Godlove had been especially impressed with the Chandi Ghar (which  is made of inorganic waste) and admitted that it was unique in the World .

Mr. Abul Kalam said that Gul Bahao’s Safai/Kamai bank interested him a good deal and he would ask the State Bank to give recognition to this new concept of a bank. He offered to give his university’s recyclable waste as a source of funding to Gul Bahao.

Nargis Latif pointed out to the Vice Chancellor that research is not only that which takes place in the protected confines of  the university laboratories  but the bazaars, the cottage industry and the informal sectors are some of the most vibrant places of innovations and new ideas. Agreeing, the Vice Chancellor said that what Gul Bahao is doing comes under the domain of applied research. Professor Sarosh Lodhi the chairman of the department of civil engineering of NED invited Nargis to speak to his students about her different research projects.

Zakaat collection during ramazan

Gul Bahao’s Nargis Latif has during the holy month of Ramazan been meeting important personalities of the city, wherein she has been outlining the organization’s several innovations which according to her can easily turn the economy around.

Recently Nargis Latif met the chairman of the Site Association Mr. Nisar Sheikhani and briefed him about how Gul Bahao’s campaign of  “you give us garbage, we give  you gold”  has yielded fruits for the business community as now they have access to cheap but good quality raw material. Nargis said that many Karachites are aware of the fact that for two years more than seventy young men from Gul Bahao used to collect assorted garbage from junk dealers in their Suzuki and Mazda trucks from all over the city, exhorting junk dealers to trade in every day waste material instead of restricting themselves to furniture and household items. Along with cash they used too give twenty four carat gold as an added incentive. The result was that more and more junk dealers started dealing in waste material which is in fact raw material for industry.

No doubt scavengers in the city were already collecting waste material from garbage dumps but Gul Bahao brought up a new brand of waste collectors and a system which was cleaner more organized and in line with the civilized worlds’ methodology of separation at source.

With the fall in the rupee value and imports becoming less competitive the sale of local waste material has risen to unprecedented heights. This has not only favored the middleman, the small businessman but has also led to the availability of cheaper alternative to imported waste material. In other words this is going to have a very good effect on our local industry as with imports becoming expensive local industry is bound to gear up.  Nargis claimed that the easy availability of raw material for industry is to some extent the result of Gul Bahao’s years of hard work and sacrifice.

The Gul Bahao movement

1st February 1994, was the day that Gul Bahao was launched by me in the company of about 20 odd people or so but without much fan fare. What made me form Gul Bahao?

The immediate reason was the garbage burning in the city, which would not allow me to open my window for fresh air to come in. But the decision to take up such an enormous task was due to a certain amount of soul searching and to thank God for rescuing me from the jaws of death on a couple of occasions. There were several other inclinations and desires in the subconscious which found fulfillment in this work and that was my creative urge to innovate, to bring up something new. The urge for scientific research was always there, ever since the time I was a teenager.

At the university we were taught that before going into practical work one must conduct research, find out what others had done on the subject so that one does not end up repeating the same thing again. I used libraries, talked to people especially those who watch serious T.V. My findings revealed that garbage, far from being a “bloody nuisance”, could be a source of immense power and wealth. I studied statistics on Karachi ’s garbage from various sources, like KMC, people doing their thesis like Mansur Ali etc. The Orange Pilot Project was one place I visited frequently. Dr. Akhter Hameed Khan was very generous with his money at a time when banks refused loans even on collateral.

During this time I found out what different factories and dealers were paying for waste paper, shopping bags, glass, plastic etc. Quick and simple calculations revealed startling facts, that dry garbage when separated from source is worth a whopping one crore rupees hard cash in a day!. Man’s innate desire to turn base metal into gold had found its response in a woman!

And this is what led to the Safai / Kamai Bank or Garbage (N) Gold Bank. Now words like the EEG (Essential Encashable Goods) have been coined. The Safai/ Kamai Bank on the University Road has been launched by GuI Bahao. It is now more than seven months old. Its progress can be gauged from the fact that from a mere Rs.37,000/- month turnover it has grown to about 6 lac rupees a month. Here, a proper rate list is put out both printed and published on a board. Goods are weighed, a receipt given out and payment made promptly. The Safai/Kamai Bank is intended to become a financial institution, of the future.

But the pace in research and innovations is never uniform. There were times when things moved very fast giving the impression that success was round the corner. At other times the pace was extremely slow resulting in alternate bouts of hope and depression. Garbage collection is not always commercially profitable, I learnt to my dismay. For instance nobody would buy the coloured shopping bags; we had so assiduously collected over a period of several months. One day my assistant and I were sitting in our tent at Liaquatabad No.10 on the bare ground. There was no chair to even sit on. The ingenious boy that Akbar my assistant was, he took a used small flour bag and stuffed it with shopping bags and gave it to me. The second attempt was wonderful; he used soft white plastic sheets and shopping bags. The effect was nothing short of a “Gao Takia”.

This incident was in my mind when during a ‘lull”, period I decided we must do something to solve the problem of shopping bogs. I now had two girls working for me who knew how to stitch clothes. They made very good pillows by simply stuffing pillowcases with shopping bags. But who would buy pillows whose contents were used shopping bags. If I wouldn’t use them how could I convince others. They say “Necessity is the mother of invention”. It rained that year in Karachi . Since, our stuff i.e. wastepaper was stored right out in the open it had to be protected and so the famous Was-tic Block came into existence.

How do we make these Was-tic Blocks?

Here the question of molecular cohesion in physics comes up. Certain objects due to their tiny size have strong cohesiveness. We put shopping bags into wooden moulds in which strings have already been laid out. With a good deal of manual force we are able to make a block just like a bale of cotton. These blocks have a tremendous strength. We have been using them alternately as partitions, walls, cubicles, floorings; a swimming pool even a room) The best part is their longevity- they being weatherproof.

I had often read that using the sun’s ultraviolet rays could be used for purifying water. It was said that this way bacteria could be removed but the minerals remained intact — an added advantage. But how? Was the million-rupee question that dogged my mind. The rays had to pass through the water in order to be effective. Leaving a vessel full of water out into the open would only invite bacteria, defeating the entire exercise.

Glass bottles are not only risky because they break, but they generally have an odour to them. Plastic mineral water bottles were the answer. This lead to the discovery of “Paaki Pani”. Un-boiled or unfiltered water is put into these bottles. These are put out into the sun light for a couple of hours. The roof is the best place as it generally gets more and continuous sunlight. Now W.H.O has announced that this technique will save the life of millions of people all over the world.

The sight and smell of a public toilet have always given me nightmares. So, I always use the natural toilet i.e. any unpaved but clean space, having enough privacy. But privacy is difficult to come by in a big city like ours. Initially I used the all-purpose ‘was-tic block? of ours to put up a cubicle for a toilet. However, though the blocks were portable, it was not convenient to ask my staff to spend an hour or so making the toilet for me.

I really don’t remember the days & circumstances under which I started using a Frigidaire carton as a mobile toilet. But the fact is that now I really cannot do without it, (a) because it is light (b) portable (c) totally see-proof, giving complete privacy and above all it is clean. On a wider but impersonal scale, I discovered this natural toilet solved our environmental problem. This wdy the human refuse need not mix up with clean drinking water supplies.

“Thandi Meethi Khad’ or ‘Instant Compost” as we call it in English is another innovation meant to reduce the composting time of 6 months to just 3 or 4 days. How did I discover “Thandi Meethi Khad”? I had done my M.Sc. in Botany more than 20 years ago with the intention of doing research in plant sciences. However, marriage and bearing three children foiled my ambitions. But as soon as I had a chance to use my knowledge of Botany, I grabbed it. While working on environmental issues I came across the concept of recycling of wet waste i.e. vegetable, peels, foods etc.

The question I had posed to many other environmentalists was ‘Supposing we were to use vegetable peels as they are, directly into the soil to be used as organic fertilizer”. Initially there was no satisfactory answer. One-day they yielded. ‘Yes, but they wouldn’t look nice as a commercial entity”.

“Looks could always be changed!” I thought to myself. My joy knew no bounds. The theoretical aspect of the problem was solved, though practical questions remained a problem due to making it on a commercial scale. Compost as everyone knows is an excellent natural fertilizer but it takes ages to form, hence it cannot be made on a commercial sale.

More than anything else collection of this wet garbage is the key problem although one sees this mixed with other dry garbage all over the city. After a number of experiments and several months gone by we have now struck on the following method of making natural fertilizer from wet garbage. Cut them into pieces and then dry out freshly thrown vegetable waste. Fresh, because neither you nor your workers would like to work with foul odour emitting garbage.

When I first started GuI Bahao, I did not have more than two assistants and that too only part time i.e. once or twice a week they would work with me. Now, by the grace of God we have a proper staff.

http://www.newslinemagazine.com/2010/10/wonderful-waste/

Fuel Pack for thermal power generators

In a press statement Gul Bahao has said that the “Fuel Pack” that it has made from waste material could help to solve the acute problem of electricity, the city is facing. According to Gul Bahao it is an environmentally friendly alternate fuel, a good substitute for oil, because it does not give out any toxic fumes, at the same time is cheap and easily available. It can be easily used as fuel for thermal power stations.

Giving the background of the “Fuel Pack” Gul Bahao has said that in 2006 it was collecting different kinds of industrial waste during the months of February to April from 80 factories of the EPZA by means of 8 trucks on daily basis and it has been conducting experiments on them ever since. Techniques used were those that have been developed by Gul Bahao for making its famous “Wastic Blocks”. The “Fuel Pack” is a block weighing ten to twelve kilo of size 6 inches by 17 inches by 21 inches. It consists of clean non toxic industrial waste like bits of wood, paper, cloth etc. which are not mixed up with putrefying waste. A protective covering of aluminum foil which is fire resistant is put on the blocks which also give it an aesthetic look.

The blocks have been used as fuel in different places which gave extremely good results. One well known industrial company even volunteered to market it. Considering the grave power situation, Gul Bahao has asked the Government to consider its “Fuel Pack” as fuel for thermal power stations. The advantage of this alternative fuel is its easy availability as well as its low cost.

Here it may be mentioned that Gul Bahao has been experimenting with waste material for the last thirteen years and so far has spent 4 crore rupees. It has had as many as 80 people working in a single day. It has also succeeded in establishing Pakistan’s first Research Center for waste management.

Gul Bahao research center inauguration by sindh assembly speaker

Yesterday Gul Bahao’s Research Center was formally inaugurated by the Sindh Assembly Speaker Mr. Nisar Ahmed Khoro. This is part of the Gul Bahao’s Complex located on a two thousand sq.yards plot on main Rashid Minhas Road. A crowd of more than three hundred people welcomed the Speaker on his arrival. The atmosphere was that of a mela with music blaring away and people coming in and looking at the different exhibits of the NGO. Amongst them were:

  • The FUEL PACK – block containing inflammable waste material which it was said could be a cheap substitute for running thermal power plants.
  • CHOORA CHARA – packets containing dry fodder for live stock.
  • A MOBILE TOILET for females.
  • PAKI PANI – a simple water purifying method.

However the biggest crowd puller was the CHANDI GHAR. This as well as the Hall used for the occasion were made of pre-fabricated material, innovated by Gul Bahao.

A major event of the occasion was the public meeting addressed by the leaders of the civil society. Nargis Latif pointed to the banner placed behind the dais which read “Karachi’s gift to the world”. She said we have been following the rest of the world specially the West for a long time. She said Gul Bahao for the last fifteen years tried to reverse the trend. It is only today that it has succeeded in attracting the attention of the Government. Nargis lamented that though the NGO has spent not less than four crore rupees on its research activities during the last ten years it received only Rs. 15000/- from the previous Government.

The Speaker of the Sindh Assembly Mr. Nisar Khoro described Gul Bahao’s Chandi Ghar as a “modern Juggi”. He said that a cemented house has become unaffordable for the poorest of the poor but now at least they will be able to give a dwelling safe from the elements for as little as 7-8 thousands rupees, the cost of a Chandi Ghar. The Speaker referred to Nargis Latif as a “jununi” or mad. He said only a person with deep commitment could take up the monumental task of doing what she is doing. Other speakers included Mr. Ashraf Nawaz of Pakistan Help Line, Mr. Habibuddin Junaidi, a well known leader of Pakistan Peoples Party and a number of leaders from the Seraiki Community. The Hall kept reverberating with slogans in favour of Peoples Party.