Mohamed Harakate was one of the people who noticed this waste was being burnt in Drâa-Tafilalet, a rural region in the Atlas Mountains that is a leading producer of dates in Morocco. Identifying this issue as an environmental concern, Harakate, with his team of Meriem Nadi, Ayoub Habik, and Selma Ben’akcha, put their heads together to find a sustainable and innovative way to solve this problem. They decided the best way to use the waste was to recycle it into useful wooden products. Their social project, Alternative Solutions, was launched in January 2017.
An innovative solution:
In spite of its scarcity of natural resources, Drâa-Tafilalet harvests an annual average of 85,000 tons of dates, which produce some 75,000 tons of palm waste each year. This waste is often burnt, used as fuel for cooking and heating, or randomly disposed.
The nascent startup takes this waste and manufactures it into durable, environmentally-friendly, alternative wood products. Their offerings include a variety of stylish floating wood shelves designed as cubes so they can stack and be displayed in countless positions. The graded colors of the palm branches add a unique touch to the modernly-crafted shelves, creating a sophisticated commodity.