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Carpenters in the village outside of Bagram Air Field pick through wood pallets recycled from the base to find the ones most suited to build tables, chairs and birdhouses.

Carpenters in the village outside of Bagram Air Field pick through wood pallets recycled from the base to find the ones most suited to build tables, chairs and birdhouses. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Carpenters in the village outside of Bagram Air Field pick through wood pallets recycled from the base to find the ones most suited to build tables, chairs and birdhouses.

Carpenters in the village outside of Bagram Air Field pick through wood pallets recycled from the base to find the ones most suited to build tables, chairs and birdhouses. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Afghan workers gather plastic bags recycled from the nearby Bagram Air Field.

Afghan workers gather plastic bags recycled from the nearby Bagram Air Field. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Afghan workers gather plastic bags recycled from the nearby Bagram Air Field.

Afghan workers gather plastic bags recycled from the nearby Bagram Air Field. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Local workers pick through the tons of garbage thrown out daily by personnel at Bagram Air Field. Around half of the daily garbage at the base is burned and half is given to contractors outside the base who recycle and sell the trash.

Local workers pick through the tons of garbage thrown out daily by personnel at Bagram Air Field. Around half of the daily garbage at the base is burned and half is given to contractors outside the base who recycle and sell the trash. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

A sanitation worker at Bagram Air Field looks over some of the tons of food waste produced each day at the base. Workers collect food waste from the base cafeterias in barrels and prepare them for composting. The compost is used to grow vegetables sold at upscale grocery stores in Kabul.

A sanitation worker at Bagram Air Field looks over some of the tons of food waste produced each day at the base. Workers collect food waste from the base cafeterias in barrels and prepare them for composting. The compost is used to grow vegetables sold at upscale grocery stores in Kabul. (J.p. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Personnel at Bagram Air Field produce on average about seven tons of food waste each day at the base. Workers collect food waste from the base cafeterias in barrels and prepare them for composting. The compost is used to grow vegetables sold at upscale grocery stores in Kabul.

Personnel at Bagram Air Field produce on average about seven tons of food waste each day at the base. Workers collect food waste from the base cafeterias in barrels and prepare them for composting. The compost is used to grow vegetables sold at upscale grocery stores in Kabul. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Nikola Gjorgjevikj, waste disposal supervisor at Bagram Air Field, inspects recycling bins filled with glass Dec. 14, 2018. About 70 tons of garbage is thrown out on average each day by personnel at Bagram Air Field, with around half of the daily garbage given to contractors outside the base who recycle and sell the trash.

Nikola Gjorgjevikj, waste disposal supervisor at Bagram Air Field, inspects recycling bins filled with glass Dec. 14, 2018. About 70 tons of garbage is thrown out on average each day by personnel at Bagram Air Field, with around half of the daily garbage given to contractors outside the base who recycle and sell the trash. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Personnel at Bagram Air Field produce about 70 tons of waste each day at the base on average. Workers collect mattresses and have given them to Afghans outside the base walls. About half of the trash each day is recycled and used by locals in areas around the base.

Personnel at Bagram Air Field produce about 70 tons of waste each day at the base on average. Workers collect mattresses and have given them to Afghans outside the base walls. About half of the trash each day is recycled and used by locals in areas around the base. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Afghan women clear tomato plants from a greenhouse near Bagram Air Field. The base's food waste is turned into compost, which locals use to grow vegetables sold at upscale grocery stores in Kabul.

Afghan women clear tomato plants from a greenhouse near Bagram Air Field. The base's food waste is turned into compost, which locals use to grow vegetables sold at upscale grocery stores in Kabul. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

A member of the Afghan Women's Environmental Association packages broccoli grown with compost made from waste from the nearby Bagram Air Field. The association sells their vegetables at upscale grocery stores in Kabul.

A member of the Afghan Women's Environmental Association packages broccoli grown with compost made from waste from the nearby Bagram Air Field. The association sells their vegetables at upscale grocery stores in Kabul. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

Trash at Camp Dahlke West in Afghanistan is brought off the base into local landfills. Workers on base sort through the trash to pick out any classified information or security risks.

Trash at Camp Dahlke West in Afghanistan is brought off the base into local landfills. Workers on base sort through the trash to pick out any classified information or security risks. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)

BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan – The heaps of garbage made at the largest U.S. base in Afghanistan fuel a million-dollar economy that has curbed the use of open burn pits linked to medical issues among both locals and international troops.

The sprawling base, home to thousands of troops and civilians, makes about 70 tons of trash each day on average, which Afghan workers sort by hand. Over the years they’ve plucked out items like classified documents, live grenades, medical needles, detonating cord and even swords, setting them aside so that they don’t move beyond the base.

Each month, trash workers also find hundreds of uniforms, contractors said, which troops are supposed to toss into special containers so they can be destroyed to keep them from reaching militants.

About half of the trash, however, is cleared for recycling and becomes treasure in the form of repurposed goods sold outside the base’s walls — furniture from discarded wood pallets, pillows from water bottles and toilet paper from cardboard boxes, for example. Discarded mattresses from base are donated to older people in the community.

“What is called waste becomes useful for people,” said Bilal Momand, general manager of Malika and Refa Environmental Solutions, a contractor that recycles the base’s trash.

About 500 Afghans are economically dependent on Bagram’s waste, he said.

Almost everything used to be burned in open pits, said Chris Waechter, country environmental manager for Fluor, the contracting company that runs many of the services at coalition bases in the country. When he got here in 2009, almost 300 tons of trash was burned in pits daily.

In the winter, when the smog was too heavy to escape the valley surrounding Bagram, walking through base was like plodding through a dirty cloud, he said.

“I would walk out and there would be a fog over the base,” Waechter said.

Toxic plumes produced by the burn pits have been linked to medical problems among veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Department of Veterans Affairs maintains a registry to track those who may have been exposed to burn pit toxins for possible health issues. A recent VA-commissioned report called for tracking the health of veterans’ children and grandchildren.

Afghans living near Bagram cough up blood and have kidney and liver problems that may be linked to the pits, according to doctors, health specialists and Afghan government officials who spoke to Radio Free Europe in 2011.

The last open burn pit here was closed in 2014, though smaller bases continue to burn their trash or send it out to local landfills without checking through it, Waechter said. The focus of the recycling program is to decrease the trash going into incinerators or landfills.

Once sorted, usable materials are trucked just off base to a compound where carpenters working for Momand sort through scrap wood from things being built or torn down, one of Bagram’s largest sources of waste. Carpenters build tables and benches or even birdhouses from it. The rest is sold as firewood.

In a compound behind the carpenters, workers rolled large plastic bags onto a truck. The plastic gets melted down for reuse. Water bottles are shredded to make stuffing for pillows.

At another site, women cleared tomato plants from a garden where some of the compost made from the 7.5 tons of food waste from base cafeterias each day nourishes vegetables that will be sold at stores in Kabul.

In a compound right outside Bagram’s walls, Momand stood near a massive pile of compost and held up a roll of coarse toilet paper. Even this was made from Bagram’s trash. Cardboard is mashed up, treated with chemicals and made into toilet paper that, at five Afghanis a roll, or about seven cents, is cheap enough for poor Afghans to afford.

The recycling contract generates about $100,000 a month, a number that includes sales of raw material to other recycling companies, said Momand’s brother, Alex Momand, who co-founded the company in 2013. The waste materials are cheaper than raw imports and he can afford to sell it to recycling plants at wholesale prices, he said.

What’s not recycled, about 35 tons of garbage each day, is burned in one of two incinerators that together guzzle up about 1,600 gallons of fuel, which includes biodiesel made from the base’s cooking oil.

Waechter said it makes a noticeable difference. He used to lose sleep thinking about the environmental damage of Bagram’s open burn pits.

“The air quality is better now,” he said.

Zubair Babakarkhail contributed to this story.

lawrence.jp@stripes.com Twitter: @jplawrence3

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