This Belgian NGO Is Recycling Human Hair To Protect The Environment

The project said on its website that hair has powerful properties

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The initiative is led by Dung Dung

To protect the environment, an NGO in Belgium are recycling hair collected from hairdressers. The initiative is led by Dung Dung - a Belgian non-profit company and the Hair Recycle project feeds locks and tresses into a machine that turns them into matted squares that can be used to absorb oil and other hydrocarbons polluting the environment or made into bio-composite bags.

"Our products are all the more ethical as they are manufactured locally ... they are not imported from the other side of the planet," he told Reuters. "They are made here to deal with local problems."

The project said on its website that hair has powerful properties: one strand can support up to 10 million times its own weight, and as well as absorbing fat and hydrocarbons, it is water-soluble and highly elastic due to its keratin fibres.

Isabelle Voulkidis, manager of the Helyode salon in Brussels, is one of dozens of hairdressers across the country that pay a small fee to the project to collect their hair cuttings.

"What motivates me, personally, is that I find it a shame hair is nowadays just thrown in the bin when I know that so much could be done with it," she said, as she combed and clipped one of her customer's hair.

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