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DUK10146986_024
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_023
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_022
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_021
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_020
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_019
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_018
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_017
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_016
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_015
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: VollebakVollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_014
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_013
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_012
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_011
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_010
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_009
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_008
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_007
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_006
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_005
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_004
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_002
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 26 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_003
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 23 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10146986_001
FEATURE - Bekleidungsfirma Vollebak stellt Uhr aus Elektronikmüll her
British clothing firm Vollebak has made an incredible new watch - made out of the world’s waste.
Most of the 50 million tonnes of electronic waste that’s generated every year is treated like garbage - but the firm has turned it into a fashionable ‘Garbage Watch’.
This waste contains many of the world’s precious metals like silver, platinum, copper, nickel, cobalt, aluminium and zinc.
You’ll find 7% of the world's gold in e-waste. In other words, millions of tonnes of the stuff people normally pay to dig up out of the ground is heading straight back into it.
To avoid trashing our planet we need to start figuring out how to re-use the stuff we already have. So the Garbage Watch started with a very simple idea.
Working in collaboration with the Wallpaper* Re-Made project, the Garbage Watch reframes an often invisible and hazardous end of the supply chain. It’s just a prototype at this stage, but next year they hope to turn it into a fashionable and sustainable product that will help efforts to reduce e-waste recycling efforts.
Founded by Nick and Steve Tindall, the firm created the world’s first Solar Charged Jacket that stores and re-emits light, a pair of 100 Year Sweatpants built to withstand fire, nature, water, and the rest of this century, and the first gear for Mars – it’s engineered with an anti-gravity pocket for shifting gravity fields, a ballistic nylon outer shell, and a vomit pocket for puking in space.
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 23 Jun 2020
Credit: Vollebak/Cover Images
**EDITORIAL USE ONLY. MATERIALS ONLY TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH EDITORIAL STORY. THE USE OF THESE MATERIALS FOR ADVERTISING, MARKETING OR ANY OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. MATERIAL COPYRIGHT REMAINS WITH STATED SUPPLIER.** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_012
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384110
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_011
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384111
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_010
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384112
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_009
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384114
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_008
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavenger sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384120
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_007
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
A scavenger sorts and collects plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384107
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_005
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384109
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_004
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384121
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_003
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384116
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_002
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384118
(c) Dukas -
DUK10123120_001
NEWS - Indonesien: Recycling in Bantar Gebang, die als die grösste Deponie der Welt gilt
Scavengers sort and collect plastics for recycling at the garbage mountain in Bantar Gebang landfill that is considered to be the world’s largest dump.
Jakarta’s Bantar Gebang Integrated Waste Treatment Area (TPST Bantar Gebang) was established in 1985. On average, 7,000 tons of waste are dumped annually at the landfill, which is expected to exceed its limit in 2021. (Photo by Agung Fatma Putra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 27384119
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_104236065_EYE
Jaime Winstone
Actor Jaime Winstone is a prominent voice against single-use plastics. She wants the government to introduce tougher legislation to stop supermarkets covering their products in unnecessary packaging.
Photography Natasha Pszenicki, assisted by Luciano Cardinale, h&m Virna Baillie.
© Natasha Pszenicki / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_104236064_EYE
Jaime Winstone
Actor Jaime Winstone is a prominent voice against single-use plastics. She wants the government to introduce tougher legislation to stop supermarkets covering their products in unnecessary packaging.
Photography Natasha Pszenicki, assisted by Luciano Cardinale, h&m Virna Baillie.
© Natasha Pszenicki / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10108274_020
PEOPLE - Royal Afrika Tour: Charles und Camilla zu Besuch in Ghana
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9962661w)
Prince Charles attends a plastics event at Sandbox during his tour of Ghana, Africa
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall tour of Ghana, Africa - 05 Nov 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10108274_019
PEOPLE - Royal Afrika Tour: Charles und Camilla zu Besuch in Ghana
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9962661f)
Prince Charles attends a plastics event at Sandbox during his tour tour of Ghana, Africa
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall tour of Ghana, Africa - 05 Nov 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10108274_018
PEOPLE - Royal Afrika Tour: Charles und Camilla zu Besuch in Ghana
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9962661y)
Prince Charles attends a plastics event at Sandbox during his tour of Ghana, Africa
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall tour of Ghana, Africa - 05 Nov 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10108274_017
PEOPLE - Royal Afrika Tour: Charles und Camilla zu Besuch in Ghana
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9962661q)
Prince Charles attends a plastics event at Sandbox during his tour of Ghana, Africa
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall tour of Ghana, Africa - 05 Nov 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10108274_016
PEOPLE - Royal Afrika Tour: Charles und Camilla zu Besuch in Ghana
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9962661l)
Prince Charles is presented a portrait of himself made from recycled plastics as he attends a plastics event at Sandbox during his tour of Ghana, Africa
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall tour of Ghana, Africa - 05 Nov 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10108274_015
PEOPLE - Royal Afrika Tour: Charles und Camilla zu Besuch in Ghana
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (9962661g)
Prince Charles attends a plastics event at Sandbox during his tour tour of Ghana, Africa
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall tour of Ghana, Africa - 05 Nov 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10106809_016
NEWS - Indien: Fluss Jamuna leidet nach Durga-Puja-Festival massiv
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Salman Ali/Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9939537e)
A day after scores of idols of the Hindu goddess were immersed in the Yamuna River on the occasion of the Durga Puja festival, the banks of the river could be seen littered with plastics and other non-degradable material, at Yamuna river bank, at Kalindi Kunj
Yamuna Pollution Woes Increase With The Conclusion Of Durga Idol Immersion, New Delhi, India - 20 Oct 2018
Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10106809_015
NEWS - Indien: Fluss Jamuna leidet nach Durga-Puja-Festival massiv
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Salman Ali/Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9939537b)
A day after scores of idols of the Hindu goddess were immersed in the Yamuna River on the occasion of the Durga Puja festival, the banks of the river could be seen littered with plastics and other non-degradable material, at Yamuna river bank, at Kalindi Kunj
Yamuna Pollution Woes Increase With The Conclusion Of Durga Idol Immersion, New Delhi, India - 20 Oct 2018
Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10106809_014
NEWS - Indien: Fluss Jamuna leidet nach Durga-Puja-Festival massiv
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Salman Ali/Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9939537c)
A day after scores of idols of the Hindu goddess were immersed in the Yamuna River on the occasion of the Durga Puja festival, the banks of the river could be seen littered with plastics and other non-degradable material, at Yamuna river bank, at Kalindi Kunj
Yamuna Pollution Woes Increase With The Conclusion Of Durga Idol Immersion, New Delhi, India - 20 Oct 2018
Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10106809_013
NEWS - Indien: Fluss Jamuna leidet nach Durga-Puja-Festival massiv
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Sonu Mehta/Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9939538a)
A day after scores of idols of the Hindu goddess were immersed in the Yamuna River on the occasion of the Durga Puja festival, the banks of the river could be seen littered with plastics and other non-degradable material, at Yamuna river bank, near ISBT Kudsia Ghat, on October 20, 2018 in New Delhi, India. Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
Yamuna Pollution Woes Increase With The Conclusion Of Durga Idol Immersion, New Delhi, India - 20 Oct 2018
Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10106809_012
NEWS - Indien: Fluss Jamuna leidet nach Durga-Puja-Festival massiv
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Sonu Mehta/Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9939538b)
A day after scores of idols of the Hindu goddess were immersed in the Yamuna River on the occasion of the Durga Puja festival, the banks of the river could be seen littered with plastics and other non-degradable material, at Yamuna river bank, near ISBT Kudsia Ghat, on October 20, 2018 in New Delhi, India. Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
Yamuna Pollution Woes Increase With The Conclusion Of Durga Idol Immersion, New Delhi, India - 20 Oct 2018
Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10106809_011
NEWS - Indien: Fluss Jamuna leidet nach Durga-Puja-Festival massiv
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Sonu Mehta/Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9939538f)
A day after scores of idols of the Hindu goddess were immersed in the Yamuna River on the occasion of the Durga Puja festival, the banks of the river could be seen littered with plastics and other non-degradable material, at Yamuna river bank, near ISBT Kudsia Ghat, on October 20, 2018 in New Delhi, India. Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
Yamuna Pollution Woes Increase With The Conclusion Of Durga Idol Immersion, New Delhi, India - 20 Oct 2018
Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Indien: Fluss Jamuna leidet nach Durga-Puja-Festival massiv
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Salman Ali/Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9939537d)
A day after scores of idols of the Hindu goddess were immersed in the Yamuna River on the occasion of the Durga Puja festival, the banks of the river could be seen littered with plastics and other non-degradable material, at Yamuna river bank, at Kalindi Kunj
Yamuna Pollution Woes Increase With The Conclusion Of Durga Idol Immersion, New Delhi, India - 20 Oct 2018
Every year after the idol immersions, the condition of the Yamuna, already considered as one of the most polluted rivers in the country, worsens. Last year, the levels of Total Suspended Solids, Biochemical oxygen demand and Dissolved oxygen deteriorated significantly at the six designated ghats.
(c) Dukas