Backpack ponchos: Peru’s solution to plastic pollution

Backpack ponchos: Peru’s solution to plastic pollution:


Trash is not garbage. This is the motto of one of Peru’s most innovative recycling campaigns, one that has already turned a million plastic bottles into thousands of ponchilas.

And ponchilas have one other important benefit: Each item is made out of 80 recycled plastic bottles.

“With this initiative, we are recovering a lot of plastic that could end up in landfills, dumps or in the oceans,” says Miguel Nárvaez, head of social and business responsibility at Cencosud, a supermarket chain and one of the companies that leads the campaign.





The ponchilas project started in 2016 when Cencosud, Agua San Luis (owned by Coca-Cola) and Pacífico Seguros set out to collaborate to reduce school dropouts in the Andes highlands because of extreme temperatures and the long distances that children must travel to get to school.

In 2017, the projected produced 6,000 ponchos; another 7,000 have already been made this year. The items were delivered to children in the provinces of Puno, Cusco, Arequipa, Huancavelica, Ayacucho and Apurímac before the beginning of the school year.



In 2018, the Ministry of Environment of Peru joined the campaign, which actively works to promote sustainable consumption and innovative ways to reuse disposable plastics.
“With this initiative what we are doing is closing the circle, using our waste and giving them an added value through recycling,” says the Environment Minister, Fabiola Muñoz.



For Minister Muñoz, the ponchilas are an example that this idea is possible: “A bottle that served you can become something useful for someone else. We have the opportunity to convert something that apparently no longer has a use into a positive thing with a new use.”
Every minute, people around the world use one million plastic bottles, and most of them end up in the oceans, where they harm wildlife.
Peru is the host of the celebrations of the 2018 World Environment Day celebrations for Latin America and the Caribbean. #BeatPlasticPollution is the theme of this year’s day.

Peru is a member of the UN Environment’s Clean Seas (Mares Limpios) campaign, which aims to drastically reduce marine debris and eradicate the use of microplastics. More than 40 countries around the world have joined the campaign, including 11 others in Latin America and the Caribbean: Barbados, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Grenada, Ecuador, Panama, the Dominican Republic, Saint Lucia and Uruguay.

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