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Home»Tourism»How Anh Duong turns plastic waste into products, learnings, livelihoods in Vietnam
Tourism

How Anh Duong turns plastic waste into products, learnings, livelihoods in Vietnam

editorialBy editorialOctober 28, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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How Anh Duong turns plastic waste into products, learnings, livelihoods in Vietnam
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How Anh Duong turns plastic waste into products, learnings, livelihoods in Vietnam

In the heart of Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, plastic waste is more than an envir­on­ment­al issue; it is a com­munity challenge.

Anh Duong Cen­ter is facing up to the chal­lenge by turn­ing plastic waste into products, learn­ings, and livelihoods.

Their innov­at­ive school-based mod­el has earned recog­ni­tion from the 2025 EXO Found­a­tion Sus­tain­ab­il­ity Awards in the ‘People’ category.

Connecting education and the environment

Anh Duong Center’s approach began with a simple but power­ful idea: link envir­on­ment­al aware­ness with children’s education.

For our plastic waste recyc­ling pro­ject, for example, instead of merely col­lect­ing waste, we empower stu­dents to become envir­on­ment­al ambas­sad­ors. Dur­ing schol­ar­ship and school events, stu­dents are invited to bring in sor­ted plastic waste.

Anh Duong Cen­ter buys the waste, provid­ing a small but sym­bol­ic income to the stu­dents’ fam­il­ies while rein­for­cing the value of recyc­ling and col­lect­ive responsibility.

So far, the pro­gram has col­lec­ted and recycled nearly nine tons of plastic. Long Tri A1 School stands out as a lead­ing example, with 600 kg of waste col­lec­ted, inspir­ing the wider com­munity to take action.

Con­tents ^

Plastic waste reborn as educational assets

Through Anh Duong Center­’s close col­lab­or­a­tion with tech­nic­al part­ners, the col­lec­ted plastic waste is trans­formed into tan­gible, use­ful products for schools.

The res­ults speak for them­selves. So far we have giv­en plastic waste new use­ful life in the formof:

  • 260 sets of desks and chairs
  • 44 trash bins, and
  • 30 book­shelves

Made almost entirely from recycled plastic, these are not only func­tion­al assets, they are power­ful sym­bols of the cir­cu­lar eco­nomy in action.