The Coca-Cola Company (2022) Recycled Records.
The Coca-Cola Company (2022) Recycled Records.  
The Coca-Cola Company (2022) Recycled Records.  
EcoPost Ltd is a for profit social enterprise. They utilise waste plastic as a resource to manufacture aesthetic, durable and environmentally friendly fencing posts. EcoPost Ltd generates employment for individuals at the initial stages of the value chain, mostly youth and women, who collect, sort and clean plastic waste for reselling.
Women at work at the Ecopost factory, in an industrial area in Eastern Nairobi.
A man who scavenges for saleable items in the Olusosun dump lies among piles of drinks cans and old shoes that he has collected into a pile and will be able to sell. The Olusosun dump is Nigeria’s largest rubbish dump comprising over 100 acres of waste and is believed to be the largest in Africa.
Dandora dump. All domestic and industrial waste is dumped here. People sort and look for valuable and recyclable materials. Plastics are sold to Ecopost.
Baby drinking Coke in Kenya, Africa.
Rubbish being burnt on the banks of a water canal just outside the town of Mansura. A lot of domestic waste is dumped and burnt due to few organised waste collections in the area.
Polluted waste water from agricultural drainage and sewage is pumped into a canal leading out into the Mediterranean near Rashida.
Zabbaleen men recycle rubbish that has been collected at a small factory in the Mokattam neighbourhood of Cairo.
Zabbaleen men carry rubbish through a street pulled by donkeys in the Mokattam neighbourhood of Cairo. The Zabbaleen are a minority Coptic religious community who have served as Cairo’s informal rubbish collectors for the past 70 to 80 years.
Zabbaleen men carry rubbish through a street pulled by donkeys in the Mokattam neighbourhood of Cairo. The Zabbaleen are a minority Coptic religious community who have served as Cairo’s informal rubbish collectors for the past 70 to 80 years.
Bags of collected and sorted rubbish, piled up between apartment blocks in Madinat Nasr, waiting to be recycled. Cairo’s rubbish is collected and recycled by a class of impoverished Coptic Christians called The Zabbaleen. They have made their livelihoods from the city’s waste since migrating from the drought stricken south of the country in the 1940s.
Coca Cola advertising sign at Sahara Desert, Egypt.
Plastic rubbish on the seabed of the Mediterranean Sea
Scuba diver holding plastic rubbish found on the seabed of the Mediterranean Sea.
Spinner dolphins (Stenella longirostris) swimming. The dolphin in the foreground has a piece of plastic caught around its flipper, in the Red Sea, Egypt.
Coca-Cola advertising, King Abdullah Mosque, in the Al-Abdali district, Amman, Jordan
Plastic bottles are stored before being sorted and recycled at the Aviv Recycling plant November 20, 2006 in the Ramat Hovav industrial park in Israel’s southern Negev desert.
Day shift manager Gherman Botrian separates detergent bottles from soft-drink and mineral water bottles before they enter the recycling process at the Aviv Recycling plant November err 20, 2006 in the Ramat Hovav industrial park in Israel’s southern Negev desert.
Mikhael Brodyansky runs his hand through colored chips from recycled plastic soft drink and mineral water bottle tops that will be used as packaging material at the Aviv Recycling plant. Brodyansky uses the mixture to produce hard plastic logs and bricks to replace traditional wooden pallets and dividers in exports going to countries like Australia and the U.S. which ban the import of untreated wooden pallets.
A worker inspects coloured chips from plastic soft drink and mineral water bottle tops at the end of the recycling process at the Aviv Recycling plant. Aviv managers say they recycle about 15 percent of the country’s PET plastic waste annually, some 4,000 metric tons or 80 million bottles, but have the capacity to sort, clean, crush and sell more than double that if recycling programs in Israel were more efficient.
People pass the Tian’anmen Square by bicycle as heavy pollution covers the city on December 27, 2007 in Beijing, China. Beijing’s air pollution reaches the top of the scale on December 27, according to the Beijing Environmental Bureau.
A worker works at a plastic waste recycling factory on December 16, 2005 in Heguan Township of Qingzhou City, Shandong Province, China. During production, workers will melt the waste plastic raw material and make them into threadlike things, then cut them into grains. They will be sold to factories as materials.
Workers transfer garbage on February 1, 2007 at Lianjiao, Foshan city, Guangdong province of China. Lianjiao, an industrial zone in Foshan’s Nanhai District has become a major domestic plastic waste collecting and processing center since the 1970s. Lianjiao processes 200,000 tonnes of plastic waste every year, 80 per cent from other parts of China, but the rest imported from other countries, Chinese officials said.
Labourers collect assorted plastic products from a garbage pile at a recycling center on the outskirts of the city on December 17, 2008 in Beijing, China. The global economic slowdown has seen the prices of recycled raw materials fall by some 50% for raw materials, with many of China’s recyclers feeling the effect.
A tree sits in the middle of a huge pile of plastic bottles at a disposal site on July 18, 2008, in Mianzhu, Sichuan Province, China. According to China Plastic Processing Industry Association, China produces more than 6.5 million tons of waste annually. The country has developed a huge market for recycled waste, according to state media.
Waste plastic bottles waiting to be compacted and shredded before being freighted to China where it will be recycled.
Coca-Cola branded crates in China
Following recent reports in a British newspaper that Britain disposed of 1.9 million tonnes of garbage in China every year, the local government has shut down all the thousands of plastic waste collecting and processing workshops and companys, though most of them have no responsibilities on this.
Coca-cola sign, Japan.
Coca-Cola Company Chairman Neville Isdell has a drink during “The Role of Corporations in a Sustainable Society and the Statesmanship of Corporate Leaders” seminar at Keidanren Kaikan on August 27, 2008 in Tokyo, Japan.
A fishermen cleaning up plastic garbage from the river, surrounded by karambas, a bamboo basket used to raise fish, on the River Code. He will try to sell the fish in three months for a good price. Yogyakarta, Indonesia. June 12, 2008.
Children play in a polluted river in Manila, Philippines.
A Philippine boy picks plastic waste from floating rubbish on the water near the Roxas Boulevard along the Manila Bay on August 24, 2007 in Manila, Philippines. According to reports, environmental protection organizations are increasingly concerned about the plastic pollution of Manila Bay.
Eight-year-old Basir (R), helps his sister Ning (L) to climb the mountain of rubbish where they will collect plastic, at the Bantar Gebang landfill site, one of Jakarta’s biggest dump sites, on January 27, 2010 in Jakarta, Indonesia. Children who live and work at the landfill site are schooled by day before going to help their parents scavange and sell their finds after classes are over.
A woman sorting plastic bottles for recycling in Indonesia, 2009.
Young Filipino carrying Coca-Cola crates in Davao del Norte, Phillipines. A shop catering to tourists can be seen in the background.
Woman who picks through trash for a living displays her manicured fingernails at the Jardim Gramacho waste disposal site on December 9, 2009 in Jardim Gramacho, Brazil. Referred to as the largest open-air landfill in Latin America, the waste disposal site of Jardim Gramacho processes up to 9,000 pounds of trash daily from Rio de Janerio.
Laura Farias, 60, separates garbage at a recycling facility set up by a Rio de Janeiro urban cleaning company Comlurb in Botafogo, loads empty plastic bottles onto a recycling company truck on June 4, 2003 in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
Elderly woman carrying bags with plastic bottles to sell for recycling, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, South America
A man sorts plastics to be recycled at the Jardim Gramacho waste disposal site on December 9, 2009 in Jardim Gramacho, Brazil. Referred to as the largest open-air landfill in Latin America, the waste disposal site of Jardim Gramacho proesses up to 9,000 pounds of trash daily from Rio de Janerio. The landfill provides a livelihood for over 1000 trash pickers who make an average daily wage of $20 separating the trash from paper, cans and plastics that are then sold as recyclables.
Plastic bottles are piled to be recycled at at the Jardim Gramacho waste disposal site on December 9, 2009 in Jardim Gramacho, Brazil. Referred to as the largest open-air landfill in Latin America, the waste disposal site of Jardim Gramacho processes up to 9,000 pounds of trash daily from Rio de Janerio. The landfill is currently set to close in 2012 to avert an environmental disaster but jeopardizing the work of the 1,300 trash pickers left who have few other employment options.
The Coca-Cola Company, the Coca-Cola System in Brazil and HEINEKEN have reached an agreement to redesign their longstanding distribution partnership in Brazil.

Coca-Cola FEMSA, S.A.B. de C.V. (BMV: KOFUBL; NYSE: KOF) (“KOF” o “the Company), was the winner of the 2021 Bonds & Loans Latin America & Caribbean Award for Investment Grade Corporate Bond Deal of the Year.
Coca Leaves Held In Hand Erythroxylum Sp. Timpia, Peru.
Peasants working on a large coca farm in the Andes. Peru is one of the largest producers of coca in the world.
Coca-Cola Billboard, Peru
A woman from the ethnic Huaorani community, bathing in the river.
The illegal cutting of trees, the unscrupulous petroleum exploitation, the inter-ethnic confrontations and the corrupt proceedings of some of their leaders, have endangered the Huao habitat during this century, in a geographic zone where the only things that do not lack are the Coca Cola and Pilsener beer companies.
A woman from the ethnic Huaorani community washes her clothes off the end of a canoe. The Huaorani, or Waos are native Amerindians from the Amazonian Region of Ecuador.
Girl stands next to a house with a Coca-Cola sign.
Huaorani tribe in Ecuador - Coca, Orellana province in Ecuador, going down through the Chiripuno River, we find the —oneno commune. This is one of the most representative aboriginal ethnical groups of Ecuador, the Huaraoni.

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Sisi Huang
Runxin Zheng
Jingxia Xu