Plastics recycling is coming to Qatar,  with a national recycling campaign making it mandatory for all households,  government organisations and public spaces to sort their rubbish in the works.
According to Doha News, dedicated recycling bins will be allocated  to families throughout the state and installed in communities, public spaces  and government buildings as part of the 'Clean Qatar' initiative, which is part  of a wider effort to meet the goals set out in the National Development  Strategy 2011-16.
This, the news outlet reported, would be a  major expansion of the current national waste recycling scheme, which only  exists at present in schools and universities.
Qatar has less then two years to fulfil its  sustainability quota and is accelerating its efforts to meet its goal to raise  recycling rates from eight per cent to 25 per cent, reducing the overall amount  of waste ending up in landfill from 91 per cent of all household waste to 64  per cent by the end of the initiative's lifespan in 2016.
Consultant for the Minister of the  Municipality and Urban Planning Farraj Sheikh Al Fassari was quoted by The  Peninsula as saying the Qatari government would give more hep to private sector  companies specialising in recycles household waste including plastics, to help  meet these targets.
Qatar has one fo the world's highest rates of  waste production per person, at around 1.6-1.8 kg each day, resulting in around  7,000 tonnes of rubbish being generated daily - and a third of this comes from  Qatari homes.
Currently, Qatari residents have to travel to  make a conscious effort to recycle, with relatively few recycling points in the  state and it is hoped by making recycling bins more accessible, households will  feel more inclined to sort their waste.