Ecopapel
(Ecopaper)
to ecopapel web site
Ecopaper samples
Paper for a Better Planet
Summary
Ecopapel began 11 years ago in the coastal city of Bahía de Caráquez,
Ecuador, as a means of using a waste product to create ethical, alternative
employment for impoverished families affected by environmental degradation
– mangrove destruction and dry tropical forest destruction. The
project recycles waste paper into beautifully designed paper and cards
complete with hand applied dried flowers.
The main objectives of the project are environmental
protection, environmental education, and community income production.
Ecopapel complements the many other activities that its founders are involved
in to develop Bahía as a model Eco-city. Ecopapel provides the
model for a foundation from which an ecologically responsible and socially
just society can grow.

Background
Bahía de Caráquez is located at the estuary of two large
rivers that join 36 km inland. This large estuary was formerly rich with
mangrove forest and marine life. The communities surrounding the estuary
lived in a harmonious existence with the mangrove forest that provided
them with many resources until shrimp farming began 30 years ago.
Shrimp farmers easily bought rights to the mangrove areas and set up
shrimp farms forcing local communities to either work as employees for
the companies, or move to towns or city slums in search of work. The resources
that the mangroves had provided, from food to building materials, dwindled
away. Now only 200 ha of the original 4000 ha of mangrove forest remains.
EcoPapel began as a response to the need of these communities to provide
food, shelter, and clothing for their families now that their resource
base had been destroyed.
The purposes of paper recycling include: reducing deforestation, making
something useful out of a waste product, reducing contamination and garbage,
avoiding burning of paper and consequent air pollution, and the development
of a general culture of recycling. Families involved in the project not
only learn about recycling but reusing and extending the useful life of
products. The project is used as a focus in environmental education of
school children and adults, demonstrating how garbage can be converted
into an income generating resource.
Since its establishment in 1991, Ecopapel
has also provided a replicable model for countless other community groups
throughout Ecuador (15 groups directly initiated by EcoPapel). The result
of which has been that of helping many people secure an alternative income,
build community bonds, raise environmental awareness, and reduce environmental
impact by recycling waste. In the many fair trade, and souvenir and craft
outlets in Ecuador you can not only find Ecopapel products, but many other
paper recycling initiatives inspired by this first exemplary model of
environmental and community stewardship.
    
     
Activities
EcoPapel has set up a collection system for the paper in Bahía
de Caráquez and surrounding areas. Schools, offices, banks, the
city hall, and printers have been involved in this process. The collected
paper is sorted and then recycled. The recycling is done manually, with
the exception of using simple machines to process the pulp. The entire
process is as natural as possible and involves none of the chemicals commonly
used in industrial papermaking. Ecopapel uses waste paper combined with
natural local fibres including banana, coconut and corn. Wherever possible
local alternatives are used for binding. Two local fruits are often used
for this purpose, one contains a natural glue (moyuyo), the other (cassava)
contains a useful starch. Paper dyes are either a product of the original
color of the recycled paper or from natural sources wherever possible.
The actual recycling is done at one workshop
and then the paper is taken to a second workshop where it is transformed
into 82 different creative products, from journals to folders, picture
frames and business cards. Almost all of the products are decorated with
dried flowers (wild and cultivated).
Out Put
Thirty-six people, mostly women, are now employed directly by Ecopapel.
The production capacity is considerable; 10,000 articles can be made per
month. New products are continually being created with different materials
from the zone.
An innovative aspect of the paper production
is that it can be both personalised and decorated with flowers according
to the taste of the client or the use it will have. A traditional printing
process is used which beautifully prints the paper creating a low relief
effect. The paper is marketed within Ecuador in fair trade and specialty
paper outlet, and internationally through the internet. This assists in
ensuring that the operation is financially sustainable by not depending
on only one sales outlet and by providing a wide range of different products.
People from all over the world have ordered personalised wedding and birthday
invitations, diplomas, clothes tags, business cards, and calendars, among
other recycled paper products.
Poverty Reduction.
The initiative has provided direct employment to 36 people who, in most
cases, support their entire families with this income. It has provided
indirect employment to many other people, including women who make the
balsa-wood packaging boxes, bamboo flowers and pens, the printer, and
flower collectors.
Employees receive an above average income allowing an increase in their
standard of living and quality of life. They have appreciated a secure
income and good human relations which has lead to strong bonding within
the workplace. Many of the women and families have been involved since
the beginning and consider Ecopapel as an extended family. Many of the
women have included their children in the work they do, and the children
now help their parents at home. This provides additional help for the
family economy and passes on work skills to future generations.
Many of the women work in their houses and are able to work at their
own pace, and with their choice of products. Every few months training
is given in an area sometimes related to work and sometimes related to
health, diet and crafts. Some training has also been given in computer
skills.
Ecopapel helped in the reconstruction of the dwellings of some of the
families who were in very marginal conditions following the disastrous
impact of the 1998 El Niño phenomenon.
Benefits from the work activity are shared according to the quantity
of paper ordered and produced. When there are large orders, there is a
bonus system so that everyone benefits. Earnings received from recycling
paper are greater than comparable alternatives, and participants enjoy
their work as a form of creative expression.
Biodiversity Impacts.
The successful model of Ecopapel has been a leading conservation initiative
in the community for 11 years and has had a significant influence in the
community process that led to the declaration of Bahía as an “Eco-city”.
Since this declaration, other local recycling groups in Bahía
have been formed involving over 150 women, children and teenagers. Such
is the success of the initiative that now waste paper needs to sourced
much further a field – spreading the good news about recycling and
sound environmental management.
Ecopapel has organized environmental education for school groups using
field trips to see the recycling of paper and other organic material,
organic agriculture, and reforestation. As part of the excursion, schools
made a promise to begin their own ecological projects like separating
and collecting paper within the schools, and making compost with the organic
matter generated in the school canteen. Seventeen hundred children were
taken on this field trip over a period of 5 months.

classifying waste paper for recycling
The use of dried plants in the decoration of the paper has had a positive
effect on the value placed on natural biodiversity that would normally
be considered as useless weeds, including the moyuyo plant used for binding
the paper. The unique and extremely scarce tropical dry forest of Ecuador´s
coast is logged and burned mostly for a monoculture style of high chemical
use, agricultural production. Ecopapel helps place an added value on intact
natural systems. The women workers also care for and grow many of the
native plants and cultivated plants, nurturing a sustainable use of wild
plants.
The activity of recycling in itself helps reduce the use of prime material
in the making of paper. The population of Bahía is not only being
taught how to recycle paper but to reuse it (use both sides) extending
it’s useful life, which lessens the demand for paper.
Major clients have agreed to send a percentage of profits made from their
particular orders to support the community environmental primary school
run by Ecopapel´s founders.
Partnerships
Ecopapel works hand in hand with all levels of the community as well as
the municipality of Bahía de Caráquez. Ecopapel has a strong
working relationship with several local, national, and international environmental
and fair trade organizations.
Ecopapel also has a solid relationship with the national fair trade organizations
which began with their decision to sell the recycled paper products. It
has been chosen as one of 13 artisan groups to participate in an electronic
commerce course organised by CAMARI, Ecuador´s main fair trade organization.
Through this opportunity, some of the workers are learning computer and
accounting skills, and a web page is being developed.
Ecopapel has a close link with THE SLOTH CLUB and ACTMANG (Japanese organizations
dedicated to environmental work and fair trade) and the Australian based
RAINFOREST INFORMATION CENTRE. These organizations have conducted numerous
tours to visit Ecopapel and their other environmental projects and have
assisted in opening up new potential markets.
Other supporting organizations are Latin American
Task Force who helps by allowing a portion of payment for workshops or
bonuses.

Forming new sheets of paper
Status and Sustainability
Ecopapel has been operating since 1992.
The key social elements are the creation of employment, poverty reduction,
a sustained family economy, decrease in migration to city slums, improvement
in health through the education provided, and a strong sense of community
within the company itself.
Ecopapel has facilitated a revaluation of the local culture - decorations
and printing often use ancient Bahían archaeological designs that
have been declining in popularity.
As an institution Ecopapel has provided an exemplary model of working
conditions and harmonious community relationships. The project has expanded
opportunities for environmental education in the wider community and provided
a replicable model for other groups around Ecuador.
Ecopapel provides the principle income to some 36 families as well as
raising funds for ecological projects in Bahía de Caráquez.
It has contributed to enhancing the image of Bahía as an ecological
tourist site, which in turn assists the economic sustainability of the
whole community.
It is a stable business initiative in the very unstable economic atmosphere
of Ecuador. The project is easily replicable with minimal capital inputs,
based on a wide and diverse customer base and is small enough to be extremely
personal and flexible in terms of creativity.
The process of paper recycling reduces use of dwindling forests, makes
use of waste products, and does not generate any contamination or waste.
The workers are empowered to value environmental protection and their
own native forest resources in both a practical and aesthetic sense.
Environmental education campaigns have facilitated the visit of 1700
school children to view the process and to challenge personal environmental
impacts. Hundreds of international visitors have also visited the project,
and have gained new insight on ways to achieve integrated conservation
and development.
Proceeds from the sale of the paper are used towards environmental projects
including a local environmental primary school.
EcoPapel has had a formative impact on the
initiative of Bahía as an Ecocity, has been featured in many television
reports and newspaper/magazine articles. It has become well known in Ecuador
through the media.

Decorating the new paper products with natural flowers, seeds shells etc
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