
Here at Mahibadhoo Island, as is the case for most of the inhabited islands, most of the waste is dumped on the beach and burnt and there is a huge problem with dumping of waste into the ocean around the islands. After the 2004 Tsunami there was a huge effort to clean up the debris on the affected islands by the International Red Cross societies. The United Nations Development Program funded the development of Waste Management Centres on some islands to store waste and recyclables. Most of the waste from Male' and the resorts and local islands is taken to Thilafushi or what is affectionately known as the "Rubish Island". Below is the Waste Transfer Station in Male'. Bangladeshi workers are used to pick the PET bottles from the waste as there is no household source separation of recyclables.

Here is the tip burning face on Thilafushi.

Here is an example of the "sea fill" of the burnt waste at Thilafushi, the waste is used to fill up the lagoon on the island. This "sea fill" is not like an engineered landfill. Leachate is not captured and treated, it simply is left to fill the coral reef bed which is porous, an impending environmental disaster.

PET is stockpiled on the island, I am told that some is recycled.

Piles of contaminated waste is also stockpiled, much of it leaking onto the ground.

Recently we ran a stakeholder consultation Branding Workshop to develop the campaign slogan and key messages. Tedry, the film maker we are working with came up with the name Nala Nala Raajje, its translation is something like Beautiful Maldives and is a popular choice of title for the campaign. Below I am explaining the design of the "Campaign Architecture"

Tedry from Eternal Pictures describes his creative storyboard

Brainstorming and designing creative slogans and images



Examples of the creative ideas for slogans and key messages are put on display under the projects key themes.

Everyone rated their favourite slogans








































