Product Details
| Title | Nothing Is Lost (Architects Of Change) |
| Synopsis |
Every day new products get crammed into the shelf space of the supermarkets. They are meant to make life easier for us and are consumed as fast as they get processed. And the public sector wonders how it should cope with the tons of waste generated every day. The garbage dumps are overflowing, the incineration plants are polluting the air and rubbish is everywhere in Shantytowns. Recycling therefore has become the prime element in waste management. Separate containers for waste have become a familiar sight in the West, but in other parts of the world one has to rely on private enterprise to put into place any system of waste collection and alerting the public to the problem. |
| Product Code | 6LSPAC07 |
| Format | DVD |
| Duration | 52 mins |
| Year | 2010 |
| Video Clip | |
| Notes | Features: Fernando Nilo, Chile; Iftekhar Enayetullah + Maqsood Sinha, Bangladesh; Makoto Murase, Japan |
| License | Non-Theatrical |
| Purchase | Please click here to view prices. |
| Related Titles |
Other available titles in this series: To Innovate Is To Imitate (Architects Of Change) Philanthropy & Capitalism (Architects Of Change) Made To Last (Architects Of Change) The Need For Biodiversity (Architects Of Change) Economics Of Taste (Architects Of Change) Growth The Green Way (Architects Of Change) Spreading Hope (Architects Of Change) The Right To Be Healthy (Architects Of Change) The Traditional & The New (Architects Of Change) Complete Product Set: Architects Of Change Series (Set Of 10) |

Every day new products get crammed into the shelf space of the supermarkets. They are meant to make life easier for us and are consumed as fast as they get processed. And the public sector wonders how it should cope with the tons of waste generated every day. The garbage dumps are overflowing, the incineration plants are polluting the air and rubbish is everywhere in Shantytowns. Recycling therefore has become the prime element in waste management. Separate containers for waste have become a familiar sight in the West, but in other parts of the world one has to rely on private enterprise to put into place any system of waste collection and alerting the public to the problem. 





