Skip to content
  • Donor Portal
  • English
Anera Logo
  • Who We Are
    • Column1
      • About Us
      • Our Staff
      • Anera FAQ
    • Column2
      • Resources
      • 2024 Annual Report
      • Contact Us
  • Where We Work
    • Column1
      • Palestine
        • Gaza
        • West Bank
      • Lebanon
      • Jordan
  • What We Do
    • Column1
      • Agriculture
      • Health
      • Community
      • Education
    • Column2
      • Water
      • Emergency
      • Stories
      • Videos
  • How to Help
    • Column1
      • Fundraise
      • Become a Social Media Ambassador
      • Attend an Event
      • Donor Portal
    • Column2
      • Give Monthly
      • More Ways to Give
      • Zakat Giving
      • Anera Leadership Circle
  • Blog
  • Donate
    • Monthly Giving
    • Zakat Giving
    • More Ways to Give
COMMUNITY

How a Refugee Camp Recycling Project Improves Livelihoods

May, 2017

In Nahr El Bared camp, a community-based recycling project is better for the environment and for scavengers like Ayman.

Ayman’s typical day starts at 6 A.M. With his wagon in hand, he heads to the waste dumping sites of Nahr El Bared Palestinian refugee camp to search for recyclables. He can count on filling his wagon with recyclables by early afternoon. He’ll stop for a quick lunch with his wife and children, and then head out for a second round. By sunset, his day is done, and he’ll have found a treasure trove of recyclable trash.

“I look for plastics, aluminum, iron, and tin,” said Ayman. “Then I sell them to a nearby factory that processes and reuses these recyclables. I can sell a whole wagon’s worth of recyclables for an average price of $16, but I pay the truck $6 to take them to the factory.”

Ayman has been a scavenger from the young age of 11. After fourth grade, he dropped out of school and spent most of his time by the sea. “They call me ‘son of the sea,’ since I am always fishing or looking for trash on the beach to make ends meet,” he said.

They call me 'son of the sea' since I am always fishing or looking for trash on the beach to make ends meet.

A Palestinian refugee camp recycles, making life easier for scavengers like Ayman.
This is what a morning's haul looks like for Ayman.

A Community-Based Solution in Nahr El Bared

3,600 households are involved in the refugee camp recycling project.

A few months ago, Ayman heard about Anera’s community-based solid waste management program. The program includes a recycling campaign that involves 3,600 households in the refugee camp. When Ayman joined, he left behind long hours of scavenging in unsanitary and hazardous places for an opportunity to make more money and spread the word.

“It is not taboo to work in scavenging, and I am very proud of what I do,” said Ayman, whose father was a sanitation worker in the camp. “I am doing this for my own good and for the good of the environment.”

The program aims to promote a culture of cleanliness, environmental consciousness and social responsibility. It also creates a viable and cost-effective environmental solution that communities can adopt and implement themselves.

Each of the participating households in Nahr El Bared receive two sorting bins: one for recyclables (such as plastic, tin, aluminum, and metal) and one for other household wastes. Then scavengers make the neighborhood rounds at scheduled times, moving from street to street in search of recyclables.

As part of the refugee camp recycling project, each household gets bins to sort trash from recyclables.
As part of the recycling project, each household gets bins to sort trash from recyclables.

“I was provided with a horn that use each time I arrive in the neighborhood,” said Ayman. “Now women and children are familiar with my collection schedule, and they come to me with their recyclables before I even blow the horn.”

In partnership with UNICEF and with funds from the Canadian government, the solid waste management program has been implemented in two Palestinian refugee camps: Nahr El Bared and Rashidiyyeh, in the north and south of Lebanon, respectively. It has engaged a total of 6,000 households and has already improved the livelihoods of local scavengers. Anera is working in capacity-building for scavengers by offering specialized training on safe waste handling. Scavengers will also be equipped with necessary tools and their routines will be organized among different neighborhoods.

“I’ve been assigned to collect recyclables from three neighborhoods: Saa’saa, Damoun, and Jahula,” noted Ayman. “It’s been easier since the campaign started. Now I fill up my wagon three times a day.”

“It is not taboo to work in scavenging, and I am very proud of what I do,” said Ayman, whose father was a sanitation worker in the camp. “I am doing this for my own good and for the good of the environment.”

SHARE THIS STORY

Related Stories

From Land Untouched to a Thriving Greenhouse

Read More →

A Stitch of Dignity

Read More →

$171 M

worth of aid to serve millions of Palestinians, Lebanese, Syrians and Jordanians, in calendar year 2025

Contact Us

WHO WE ARE

Site Map

  • Who We Are
  • Where We Work
  • What We Do
  • How to Help
  • Donor Portal
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Stories
  • Join Our Team
  • Contact Us

More About Anera

Anera addresses the development and relief needs of refugees and vulnerable communities in Palestine, Lebanon and Jordan. 

Anera is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization (tax-ID number 52-0882226). Your gift is secure and tax deductible to the extent allowed by law.

Follow Us on Social Media

Sign up for news from the Middle East

$0 M

worth of aid to serve millions of Palestinians, Lebanese, Syrians and Jordanians, in calendar year 2025
Donate

Sign up for news from the Middle East

Get updates, news, and more from Anera

Sitemap

  • Who We Are
  • Where We Work
  • What We Do
  • How to Help
  • Donor Portal
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Stories
  • Join Our Team
  • Contact Us

About Anera

Anera addresses the development and relief needs of refugees and vulnerable communities in Palestine, Lebanon and Jordan.

Anera is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization (tax-ID number 52-0882226). Your gift is secure and tax deductible to the extent allowed by law.

© Anera, 2026 | Print This Page | Site Credit

FAQ  |  TRUSTED & RESPECTED |  PRIVACY POLICY

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Read More

Decline Cookie Settings
Accept All
Powered by WPLP Compliance Platform
Cookies are small text files that can be used by websites to make a user's experience more efficient. The law states that we can store cookies on your device if they are strictly necessary for the operation of this site. For all other types of cookies we need your permission. This site uses different types of cookies. Some cookies are placed by third party services that appear on our pages.
  • Necessary
    Always Active
    Necessary cookies help make a website usable by enabling basic functions like page navigation and access to secure areas of the website. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.
    Name Domain Purpose Expiry Type
    wpl_user_preference www.anera.org WP GDPR Cookie Consent Preferences. 1 year HTTP
    wpl_viewed_cookie www.anera.org WP GDPR Cookie Consent 365 HTTP

  • Marketing
    Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.
    Name Domain Purpose Expiry Type
    page_takeover_campaign www.anera.org --- 1 days ---
    __fx anera.org --- 10 years ---
    _gcl_au anera.org --- 3 months ---
    _fbp anera.org Facebook Pixel advertising first-party cookie 3 months HTTP
    omVisits www.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    fr facebook.com Used by Facebook to deliver a series of advertisement products. 3 months HTTP

  • Analytics
    Analytics cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
    Name Domain Purpose Expiry Type
    _gid anera.org Google Universal Analytics short-time unique user tracking identifier. 1 day HTTP
    _ga anera.org Google Universal Analytics long-time unique user tracking identifier. 2 years HTTP
    _omappvp www.anera.org OptinMonster tracking cookie 12 years HTTP
    _omappvs www.anera.org OptinMonster tracking cookie 2 Years HTTP

  • Preferences
    Preference cookies enable a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in.
    Name Domain Purpose Expiry Type
    __cf_bm www.anera.org Generic CloudFlare functional cookie. Session HTTP
    __cflb secure.everyaction.com Generic CloudFlare functional cookie. Session HTTP
    NID google.com Google unique id for preferences. 6 months HTTP

  • Unclassified
    Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
    Name Domain Purpose Expiry Type
    _ga_XFLY3HVBKW anera.org --- 2 years ---
    _gat_UA-3804815-1 anera.org --- Session ---
    _ga_9D82NNM9FJ anera.org --- 2 years ---
    omVisitsFirst www.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    _gcl_ls www.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    omSessionPageviews www.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    omScrollHeight www.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    omSessionStart www.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    consent_version www.anera.org --- 1 year ---
    wpl_tc_string www.anera.org --- 1 year ---
    IABTCF_AddtlConsent www.anera.org --- 1 year ---
    anera_visitor www.anera.org --- 1 month ---
    lastExternalReferrerTime www.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    lastExternalReferrer www.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    SessionKeyCookie support.anera.org --- Session ---
    ai_user support.anera.org --- 1 year ---
    ai_session support.anera.org --- Session ---
    AI_sentBuffer support.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    AI_buffer support.anera.org --- 56 years ---
    doublethedonation www.anera.org --- 56 years ---

Powered by WPLP Compliance Platform
Cookie Settings
 Share This
 Facebook
 WhatsApp
 LinkedIn

Share on Mastodon