Try GOLD - Free
PLASTIC BURNOUT
Time
|July 15, 2024
Fiji is ground zero for the planet's waste problem and the challenge of stopping it at the source

WHENEVER THE GROWING PILE OF PLASTIC waste in front of her door takes up too much space, Asinate Lewabeka has a simple solution. She sets it on fire. She prefers to do so at dawn when the air is still so that the smoke rises in a black column. She says any later in the day, the coastal breeze risks blowing the acrid fumes straight into her home, a modest shack built on the edge of the Vunato dump site in Lautoka, Fiji’s second-largest city.
Lewabeka watches in satisfaction as flames consume the haphazard pile of empty water bottles, travel-size tubes of shampoo, juice cartons, wads of food packaging, a broken plastic fan, and coils of copper wire coated in PVC insulation, reducing it all to carbonized lumps. “Plastic rubbish is the worst kind,” she says. “It is everywhere. It makes our country look so bad. I don’t want it to be a pollutant in our neighborhood, so I collect it and burn it so I can get rid of it.”
It may no longer be an eyesore, but Lewabeka’s problem is far from gone. Burning plastic releases toxic substances that will remain in the environment for hundreds of years, with deleterious impacts on human and ecosystem health. Yet open burning is one of the most common methods for eliminating unwanted waste in a remote island nation besieged by a plastic tide. Less than a third of Fiji’s plastic waste is locally produced. The rest drifts in with ocean currents from as far away as South Africa and Mexico. It must be disposed of, wherever it comes from, and burning is often the simplest option.
This story is from the July 15, 2024 edition of Time.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Time

Time
Crisis in the Shadows
MILLIONS DISPLACED, FAMINE SPREADING—YET SUDAN'S TRAGEDY UNFOLDS FAR FROM THE WORLD'S GAZE
6 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
AMERICAN CRISIS
The killing of Charlie Kirk and the political violence that haunts the nation
7 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
REBOOTING SOUTH KOREA
PRESIDENT LEE JAE-MYUNG ON HIS PLAN TO KICK-START HIS NATION'S ECONOMYAND COURT DONALD TRUMP
9 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
PRAIRIE NOIR
Ethan Hawke plays an investigative reporter in a new series from the creator of Reservation Dogs
6 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
A fighter reckons with his turbulent past
THE DAY BEFORE THE SMASHING MACHINE PREMIERES at the Venice Film Festival in early September, Mark Kerr describes his emotional state as “vibrational.”
6 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
David Lauren The fashion executive talks about AI, tariffs, and working for his father for 25 years
You’re the chief innovation officer and chief branding officer at Ralph Lauren. What does that actually mean you do?
3 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
KiD OF THE YEAR
THROUGH HER HARD WORK, 17-YEAR-OLD TEJASVI MANOJ HOPES TO CREATE A SAFER WORLD FOR SENIORS
8 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
Latino Leaders
From ENTERTAINMENT to ACTIVISM, SPORTS to SPACE, these 12 PEOPLE are making their MARK on their FIELDS, the U.S., and the WORLD
9 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
Brotherly love and loathing in a New York City thriller
THE BLACK RABBIT IS THE KIND OF Manhattan restaurant that invariably gets described as a clubhouse.
2 mins
September 29, 2025

Time
The D.C. Brief
WHEN DONALD TRUMP HAS SPOken of late, many Americans have been less interested in his words than his appearance. Is he wearing more makeup than usual? Any new bruises? Is he steady? It is perhaps a reasonable response after so much talk circulating this summer about whether Trump is at death's door or through it.
2 mins
September 29, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size