Approved by curator
Added: Feb 11, 2021
Last edited: Jun 14, 2022
The City of Vancouver has launched a ‘Zero Waste 2040’ plan, within which it conducts outreach and education activities.
Creating a zero-waste community requires everyone living and working in the city to change the way they view and manage waste. Without raising awareness and providing education on waste-related programmes, any efforts from the city to achieve the zero-waste strategy won't be successful.
Zero Waste Place is a free programme aimed at educating students about the City’s zero waste goals. Its purpose is to increase waste literacy among young students (from kindergarten until 7th grade) and to foster positive, action-oriented behavioural change. Each class receives three workshops, plus additional activities between workshops. The interactive sessions cover topics such as: litter prevention, strategies for properly sorting items, avoiding waste, and designing and managing a project that addresses waste and litter at the community level.
During the 2018-2019 school year, over 170 workshops were delivered to 38 schools in Vancouver, reaching over 2,000 students.
Photo by Brayden Law from Unsplash.
Use waste as a resource
Team up to create joint value
Valorise waste streams - closed loop
Valorise waste streams - open loop
Government collaboration
Community collaboration
Education and Curriculum
Strengthen and advance knowledge
Ecological Impact
Social Impact
Increase Awareness
Reduce Material Consumption (SDG12)
Minimise Waste (SDG12)
Inform
Circular Economy in school programmes
Extra-curricular education
Awareness raising events
Information campaigns
Zero Waste Cities
waste education