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Bamboo toothpicks
Bamboo toothpicks









bamboo toothpicks

I hope they get to scale up their project quickly. Mutenga Bamboo has also just introduced a new range of pens that use bamboo barrels instead of the usual plastic barrels. Rowen and his colleague are currently in Germany until February of next year as part of the program. Mutenga Bamboo was recently announced as one of the winners of the second batch of Circular Valley’s circular economy accelerator. Bamboo has natural anti-bacterial and anti-fungal properties. Mutenga Bamboo is now scaling up its locally made bamboo toothpicks to fill this gap and help reduce the import bill. There were a lot of jokes and memes on how the country can’t even make toothpicks. Toothpicks are mostly imported from China. In 2020, a report said that Zimbabwe spends $105m on toothpicks, chewing gum, and diaper imports. There has been an uproar over some of the goods Zimbabwe is spending some of its scarce foreign currency on.

bamboo toothpicks

There has been a drive to try and increase the production of goods locally under import substitution initiatives to save foreign currency and to also increase exports to earn more foreign currency. This has resulted in periodic petrol and diesel shortages. Zimbabwe has been facing acute foreign currency shortages for most of the past 2 decades. Producing charcoal from bamboo forests has been said to take pressure off fragile forest resources used for fuel, heating, and firewood. Bamboo can be harvested for use in about 3-6 years. As part of its commitment to promote the circular economy, Mutenga Bamboo incorporate waste cardboard boxes as well as waste sawdust in its production process. He is now looking to scale up the production of several bamboo-based products.īased in Nzvimbo Village, Mazowe, Zimbabwe, Rowen Meda’s Mutenga Bamboo uses bamboo, which matures much faster than indigenous trees, to make charcoal for cooking, heating, and tobacco curing.

bamboo toothpicks

He then started to experiment with bamboo. That is when he started exploring several solutions using locally available resources. Rowen, who has always been environmentally conscious and had been looking to be more active in environmental activism, decided to look for more sustainable alternatives to help his mom and the community. It was during this time that he noticed that it was becoming increasingly difficult for his mom and her neighbors to find firewood for cooking due to the massive deforestation in the area over the past couple of decades. At the start of the pandemic in 2020, during the first hard lockdowns, Rowen spent most of his time in his rural village. Rowen Meda, who was born and bred in rural Zimbabwe, recently came face to face with the devastating effects of deforestation. Forest and woodland resources now cover 45% of the country’s land area, down from 53% in 2014. Zimbabwe loses about 330,000 hectares of forests annually. The levels of deforestation mean that a serious forest preservation and reforestation initiative has become critical. Tobacco remains one of Zimbabwe’s major foreign currency earners, along with gold and nickel.

  • Land clearing for various land uses including agriculture.
  • According to Zimbabwe’s Environmental Management Agency (EMA), the major contributors to deforestation are:











    Bamboo toothpicks