The Sustainability Lab — a new environmental project at Fairmont Maldives

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The Sustainability Lab, Maldives
The Sustainability Lab will become the centre of Fairmont Maldives’ wider sustainability initiatives, offering a variety of educational programmes and activities to provide guests with first-hand experience in conservation research.

(TAN): Fairmont Maldives Sirru Fen Fushi, a private island in the remote Shaviyani atoll, has unveiled the  latest in a series of pioneering environmental projects – the Sustainability Lab – the first of its kind  in the archipelago. 

A hub of eco-education, the Sustainability Lab will turn plastic waste into bespoke  souvenirs and unique products, educate guests and empower local communities.

As tourism continues to grow and develop in the Maldives, so too does concern regarding single-use  plastics and its impact on the pristine ecosystems – experts claim that by 2050 there will be more  plastic in the ocean than fish. Fairmont Maldives’ mission is to fully recycle all the plastic waste  generated by the resort and surrounding local communities, and ultimately, remove ocean plastic  from the Maldivian environment.

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Specialised machinery in the Sustainability Lab will transform and repurpose plastic waste into  beautiful bespoke souvenirs, including luggage tags in the shape of turtles, mantas and sharks.  After plastic has been collected from the beach, reef, and ocean, they are separated alongside glass  and aluminium, before a series of machines are used to shred, melt, shape and press it into various  products – an extruder melts plastic into moulds to create unique shapes, a sheet press will make  custom designed furniture and low-grade plastic, glass and sand will be transformed into recycled  plastic building bricks. The resort has already processed over 725 kg of plastic in the lab to date,  turning the waste into exquisite and unique furniture, useful stationary for local schools including  rulers, clipboards, and carabiner hooks, as well as turtle-shaped luggage tags for guests.  

The Sustainability Lab will eventually become a  recycling centre in the atoll and beyond, creating a culture of sustainability and accountability in  local communities. Surrounding islands will be encouraged to collect, sort, and recycle their plastic  waste by sending it to Fairmont Maldives rather than leaving it to landfill or to be disposed of in the  ocean.  

The resort has partnered with seven local schools in Shaviyani Atoll for the Fairmont  Award Scheme, whereby the sustainability team will visit the schools to teach classes and host  workshops on recycling, marine biodiversity, climate change and ocean conservation. Local children  are also invited to visit the resort to witness the Sustainability Lab in action in addition to the island’s  other conservation projects; encouraging the next generation to care passionately about protecting  their natural ecosystem.  

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The Sustainability Lab will become the centre of Fairmont Maldives’ wider sustainability initiatives,  offering a variety of educational programmes and activities to provide guests with first-hand  experience in conservation research. Guests can join the sustainability team to collect plastic waste  before learning how to use the machines and make their own products, learning the importance of segregating and recycling plastic and how it can be commoditised to make beautiful bespoke gifts  and souvenirs.

One of the biggest problems facing sea turtles in the world today is the large quantity of plastic  polluting the oceans. To emphasise the importance of tackling this issue, Fairmont Maldives has  launched their Turtle Ranger Program, whereby guests can learn about the various conservation  methods and techniques to better protect this endangered species, and help the marine biology  department collect Photo ID tracking data, which are collected on behalf of the Olive Ridley  Project, a Maldives-based NGO focused on turtle research. Guests can join the Marine Biologist to  protect turtle nests, assist hatchlings in their journey from nest to ocean, rescuing turtles entangled  in ghost nets and collecting vital tracking data to monitor migration patterns.

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As part of the programme, the resort now tracks over 50 resident Hawksbill turtles, and in 2021, they  released over 1,200 baby green turtles born on the east coast of the resort. The Turtle Rangers also  carry out workshops in the Sustainability Lab, converting plastic removed during beach cleaning into  turtle shaped products using the innovative recycling machines.  

These initiatives are part of Fairmont Maldives’ Save the Ocean programme which is split into three  key projects; reef conservation and protection, the Sustainability Lab, and an educational awareness  campaign to resort guests and the local community. Each project focuses on different aspects of a  sustainable way of saving the ocean and protecting marine biodiversity in the Maldives.

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