International Business Times

BEIRUT — When Hani
Darwish rolled down his car window hoping to cool off from Beirut’s hot
afternoon, he was instantly met with the sickly sweet rotting smell of
the Lebanese capital’s newest inhabitant: uncollected garbage. Despite
the stench, Darwish braved the deadlocked traffic and drove his Uber van
around the city for four hours Friday, Earth Day, so he could collect
recyclable items and help fix Lebanon’s trash crisis.

It’s been
nearly a year since the start of Lebanon’s trash crisis, the result of a
political disagreement that saw the capital’s biggest landfill close,
leaving garbage to plague the country. One solution was to promote more
recycling, but for many living in Lebanon separating one’s trash is a
luxury they cannot afford. Driving bags of plastic and paper to one of
the dozens of recycling centers is a trip that most people in Lebanon do
not think is worth the hassle of traffic. But on Friday, U.S.-based
ride-hailing service Uber simplified this process
by, literally, creating an app for that.