The HJM group promotes an integrated waste management hierarchy emphasizing on the six R’s - Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Respect, Responsibility , and Recognition and help each community to develop a waste management program which will divert its waste stream from disposal to recycling.
HJM group’s courageous initiative to minimizing solid waste haphazard disposal and diverting the waste stream away from landfills is based on four key concepts: Environmental sustainability, Economic development, Education, and Personal advancement. The program encourages people to segregate their daily waste and by doing so become active and responsible citizens of their communities.
The HJM group recognizes that sorting at source is the best practice to realize an overarching solution for the waste problem. Since we are committing to a long-term investment in the waste treatment sector, we aim to initiate and develop awareness campaigns to explain to the public the massive environmental consequences caused by our current sanitary system, and practices. On the other hand, we will promote a comprehensive set of actions designed to help the public in contributing to solving the problem. By implementing initiative in a town or governate, we empower the citizens by giving them the skills to actively take part in managing their resources. The perception that garbage is not “my problem” can be changed when everyone realizes they can make a significant contribution to managing resources.
Given that our team is rooted by academic lecturers and well-spoken researchers trained to the art of teaching, training, and conveying knowledge, we have the potential to reaching the public in a simpler, clearer, and most articulate of manners.
In every municipality where HJM constructs a plant, a town program for sorting at source will be initiated, in collaboration with other existing initiative that promots waste management. By sorting at source the town will benefit from a wide recognition program, receive awards and donations in conjunction with their needs, and find alternative sources for their supply channels. Although the potential for cost reduction is great, a narrow focus on savings alone may not be enough to place waste management on anyone’s agenda. A good waste management program has implications on improved public relations, controlled environmental problems and conserved energy.
Finally, having a company that offers all the services from collection to treatment plants, and research & development, we can promote many incentives (financial, social, inauguration …) for the public to motivate them in committing to sorting at source. These incentives can only be set by the people operating waste facilities, by calculating the effect of sorting at source on the operational cost of the plant. This allows them to set a portion of the return to incentives for the population to promote sorting at source.
About a months later, recycled food waste from households like yours will be converted to compost.