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Recycling toxic agricultural waste creates employment and improves environment

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Title Recycling toxic agricultural waste creates employment and improves environment
 
Creator Kivaisi, A.K.
 
Subject research
 
Description Video recorded at the Launching of Bio-Innovate Programme, ILRI, Nairobi, 16 March 2011.
For hundreds of years, coffee and sisal have been grown across large areas of Kenya, Tanzania and Ethiopia. Each year, this produces thousands of tons of toxic waste and slowly-degrading by-products such as fibres, which are left on the land, and end up by polluting both the soil and water. Now new bioscience techniques have developed ways to use these waste products for mushroom production. This process reduces toxins, breaks down the fibres, and leaves the residues suitable for bio-gas production—a huge asset in East Africa where many parts suffer from energy shortages. Overall, millions of people could benefit (Amelia Kivaisi, Bio-Innovate Environmental Consortium Project Principal Investigator in Tanzania).
 
Date 2011-03-16
2011-03-25T13:15:34Z
2011-03-25T13:15:34Z
 
Type Video
 
Identifier Kivaisi, A. 2011. Recycling toxic agricultural waste creates employment and improves environment. Video. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3375
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GU58DZJzIRU
 
Language en
 
Rights Open Access
 
Publisher International Livestock Research Institute