The issue of plastic: A global crisis reflected in Goma’s streets

In Goma, plastic pollution is no abstraction. From weekly street clean-ups to informal recycling, the city shows how a global crisis plays out in everyday urban life — with Lake Kivu still at risk.
  • Daniel Buuma
  • January 15th, 2026
The issue of plastic: A global crisis reflected in Goma’s streets
The mayor of Goma takes part in Salongo, the city’s weekly community clean-up, escorted by armed security, 2 August 2025. Since the M23 takeover in January, residents have been required to participate in mandatory sanitation work. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma

Global numbers, local consequences

Plastic waste is among the world’s most persistent environmental threats. Global production has risen sharply since the early 2000s, reaching over 400 million tonnes per year by 2022. Most plastic products are used briefly, yet can take centuries to decompose.

Each year, humanity generates more than 350 million tonnes of plastic waste. Less than ten percent is recycled; most is landfilled, incinerated, or mismanaged. Large volumes leak into rivers, lakes, and oceans, where they accumulate and cause long-term ecological damage.

These global trends are not abstract. In Goma, eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, plastic waste is visible in streets, markets, and waterways — part of daily life in a city under pressure.

Residents collect plastic waste during Salongo, Goma’s mandatory weekly community clean-up, 2 August 2025. Waste is gathered by hand and later transported by truck. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma

Cleaning the city under new rule

Since the M23 rebel group took control of Goma in late January 2025, local authorities have intensified sanitation measures. Every Saturday morning, residents must take part in Salongo, community work focused on cleaning streets and drainage channels.

Households also pay a monthly sanitation fee: 6,000 Congolese francs in Karisimbi and 15,000 francs in Goma commune. After completing Salongo, participants receive a token — a jeton — which serves as proof of compliance. The city’s leadership has made the campaign highly visible.

Goma’s mayor, vice mayor, and members of the mayoral office participate in Salongo across several neighbourhoods, 2 August 2025. The current city leadership was appointed following the M23 takeover. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma

In some areas, streets appear cleaner and drainage channels clearer. The mayor’s personal involvement has been widely noted — both as an appeal to civic responsibility and as a symbol of authority.

Waste that does not disappear

Despite these efforts, waste collection remains limited. Trucks collect plastic gathered during Salongo only once a week, rotating between neighbourhoods. In a fast-growing city, plastic waste accumulates far more quickly.

As a result, piles of collected rubbish often remain along roadsides or are moved to informal dumping sites.

Plastic waste accumulates near the port at Kituku Market, Goma, 28 December 2023. Much of the city’s unmanaged waste eventually reaches waterways connected to Lake Kivu. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma

Lake Kivu: The blind spot

Most clean-up efforts focus on streets and markets. Lake Kivu, a critical resource for fishing, transport, and tourism, remains largely unprotected.

Mismanaged waste from households and informal dumpsites is frequently washed into drainage channels that flow directly into the lake. Environmental activists warn that without a clear strategy for Lake Kivu, plastic pollution will continue to threaten fisheries, livelihoods, and public health.

Plastic waste piles up near Kituku Market in Goma, 28 September 2023. Rivers and drainage channels carry much of this debris toward Lake Kivu. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma

Making value from waste

Alongside official efforts, local organisations have developed practical responses. In several neighbourhoods, plastic waste is collected and transformed into plastic paving stones, reducing pollution while creating income.

Many residents — especially young people — spend hours searching dumpsites for plastic, which they sell to small recycling initiatives.

A boy scavenges for plastic bottles among discarded waste at Virunga Market, Goma. Informal waste collection provides income for many families. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma
Workers load plastic waste collected from Virunga Market onto a truck, Goma, 24 September 2023. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma

Innovation under strain

These recycling initiatives face structural limits. Plastic remains deeply embedded in daily life, affordable alternatives are scarce, and public awareness of waste reduction remains low. As a result, recycling capacity struggles to keep pace with the volume of plastic generated.

Byamungu, a plastic recycler, sorts waste at a makeshift kiln in Mugunga, Goma, 25 March 2024. Plastic is melted and reused to produce paving stones. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma
Plastic waste is fired in a kiln to create paving materials in Mugunga, Goma, 25 March 2024. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma
Finished plastic paving stones are arranged after production at a recycling site in Mugunga, Goma, 25 March 2024. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma

Who bears the cost

Plastic pollution in Goma reflects a broader global imbalance: regions that contribute least to plastic production often suffer most from its consequences. Children and displaced families are among those most exposed.

A seven-year-old displaced boy weighs plastic waste for resale in Mugunga, Goma, 9 September 2024. Before the M23 takeover, more than two million displaced people were living around the city. Photo: The Niles / Daniel Buuma

Between urgency and resolve

Goma’s streets tell a layered story: of brooms and jetons, of recycling kilns and informal labour, of control and civic duty under conflict.

Community clean-ups and local innovation offer partial relief. But without coordinated policy, sustained investment in waste management infrastructure, and measures to reduce plastic use at the source, the city’s efforts risk remaining temporary.

For now, plastic continues to move — from markets to streets, from drains to Lake Kivu — carrying with it the unresolved weight of a global crisis played out at local scale.