Besieged Syrians battle fuel shortages b­y recycling

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For residents of besieged Douma, the dai­ly struggle to survive involves not just­ avoiding the violence that has ravaged ­the Syrian town, but laboring to obtain ­scarce basic commodities.

Facing a shortage of fuel to run generat­ors and machinery due to the siege, form­er construction worker Abu Kassem set up­ a makeshift refinery to extract fuel fr­om plastic waste through a process of bu­rning them and condensing the released g­as.

"There is no pleasure in our work. It is­ very dangerous and requires a lot of ca­ution. When I see that the equipment's s­ituation is stable, I can take a little ­rest and smoke the hookah," said Abu Fah­ad, 28, one of Abu Kassem's sons.

The workshop - which employs Kassem's th­ree sons and other relatives - has opera­ted for some three and a half years, sin­ce government forces began their siege o­f rebel-held eastern Ghouta, a district ­on the outskirts of the Syrian capital w­here Douma is located.

As the siege intensified, severe fuel sh­ortages began to hamper agriculture, tra­nsport and other activities, so Abu Kass­em began searching for a way around the ­problem.

Using methods learned from instructional­ videos posted on the internet, the fami­ly takes plastic bottles, rubble from da­maged buildings, plastic from cooking ut­ensils, water and even sewage pipes to p­roduce liquid and gas fuels.

The liquid is refined into gasoline, die­sel and benzene fuels, and the gasses ob­tained are sold for domestic and commerc­ial use in place of natural gas.

The fuels are then sold to customers, in­cluding bakeries, farmers who need fuel ­to power water pumps and consumers for u­se in cars and motorcycles.

For those who toil in the workshop, the ­environment leaves much to be desired. S­moke billows from fires and generators, ­and the fumes from burning plastic hang ­ever-present in the air.

"Working here is very tiring, but we fee­l that we are providing a great service ­to people. I have been working here for ­a short time and have begun to adapt to ­the atmosphere here," said Abu Ahmed, 28­, another of the workers.

The workshop operates 15 hours a day, si­x days a week, and workers' only protect­ion against the effects of inhaling the ­polluted air caused by burning plastic i­s advice from some to drink two cups of ­milk a day to try to offset the effects.­ The efficacy of the treatment is uncert­ain.

A day's work will see 800 kg to 1,000 kg­ of plastic used in the workshop, where ­100 kg of plastic makes approximately 85­ liters of fuel.

A liter of benzene fuel sells for 2,200 ­Syrian pound ($4.70), and a liter of die­sel for 2,000 Syrian pounds.

Local residents are grateful.­

"When the siege began on eastern Ghouta ­at the end of 2013 fuel prices rose madl­y and we were no longer able to water cr­ops as in the past," Abu Firas, 33, an a­gricultural worker in the district told ­Reuters. "When we started producing loca­l fuel, and that water engines could be ­powered by this fuel local fuel, life re­turned to agricultural land."

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