Community & Environment Hub

Ufukwe Wetu.
Wajibu Wetu.

"Tumerithishwa, Tuwarithishe."

The JMMBA Community & Environment Hub brings together two committees — Mazingira and Jamii — into one space for shoreline stewardship, community action, environmental education, and measurable local impact. Every last Saturday of the month, we clean our beach. Everyone is welcome.

92
participants
On 7 March alone — 44 women, 48 men, 6 partner organisations
2,215
kg
Total weight collected on 7 March — 201 bags at 11.02 kg avg
863
items
Individually identified and categorised using WABA methodology
62.6%
recyclable
Of all items — 540 recyclable out of 863 total catalogued
Weekly results — cumulative

From 7 February to 7 March: 1,101 bags. Every week without fail.

Since 7 February 2026 our team has shown up every single week. The programme culminated in a landmark event on 7 March with the District Commissioner of Kinondoni present.

W1
7 February 2026
217 bags collected
First week of the programme. Community mobilisation begins.
W2
14 February 2026
304 bags collected
Highest single-week collection. Community engagement growing.
W3
21 February 2026
291 bags collected
WABA methodology introduced. Formal data collection begins.
W4
28 February 2026
88 bags — first full WABA audit
Average weight confirmed: 11.61 kg per bag. Total 4-week estimate: ~10–11 tonnes.
DC
7 March 2026 — Full WABA Report
201 bags · 2,215 kg · 92 participants · 500 metres
DC Kinondoni present. 863 items identified across 5 waste categories. 6 partner organisations. Data submitted to NPAP.

7 March 2026 — Waste Category Breakdown

863 items were individually identified and categorised. Here is what we found on Mbezi Beach A.

Recyclable waste 540 items · 62.6%
Plastic bottles (165), Glass bottles (81), Plastic cups (68), Shoes (67), Flip-flops (57)
Residual waste 196 items · 22.7%
Foam fragments (155), Food wrappers (15), Straws (7)
Hazardous waste 112 items · 13.0%
Medical bottles (54), Plastic pads (25), Diapers (20), Syringes (7)
Electronic waste 15 items · 1.7%
Total weight collected (7 March)
2,215.02 kg
201 bags × 11.02 kg avg
500 metres

Data submitted to NPAP — National Plastic Action Partnership Tanzania. Partners: Sana Mare, HUDEFO, MBRC, Dontino Refills, Serikali ya Mtaa, JMMBA.

Tree planting

2 Trees per Household

JMMBA's Mazingira committee runs a tree-planting initiative alongside the beach clean-up. Every household is encouraged to plant at least two trees. Members have already begun — including midodoma seedlings. Our goal: make Mbezi Beach A the greenest and cleanest neighbourhood in Dar es Salaam.

Get involved

How to participate in the clean-up.

1

WhatsApp us to confirm

Send a WhatsApp to +255 752 181 988 saying you want to join the next clean-up. We will add you to the coordination group and send you the exact meeting point and time.

WhatsApp us →
2

Show up at Rainbow Beach

Every last Saturday of the month, we gather at Mbezi Beach A (locally known as Rainbow Beach). Bring comfortable clothes, sunscreen, and water. We provide bags and gloves.

📍 Open on Maps →
3

Everyone is welcome

You do not need to be a JMMBA member to join the clean-up. Residents, visitors, schools, businesses, NGOs, and partner organisations are all welcome to participate and be counted.

Join JMMBA →
07 March 2026

Ziara rasmi — Mhe. Saad Mtambule, Mkuu wa Wilaya ya Kinondoni

The 7 March 2026 official visit placed the Mbezi Beach A shoreline issue directly before district leadership. The visit reinforced the seriousness of the community's environmental case and strengthened the connection between local action, public authority, and the future of the area.

District Commissioner and leaders during shoreline inspection at Mbezi Beach A
Shoreline inspection — 7 March 2026.
Community briefing during the official visit
Community briefing and stakeholder engagement.
Waste sorting and evidence review during the community action
WABA evidence review on site.
📄 Risala kwa DC 📊 WABA Report
What comes next

From cleaning the beach to stopping the waste before it arrives.

Repeated beach clean-up is necessary — but it cannot by itself solve a problem that is continually being reloaded. Waste from inland drainage lines, rivers, and gully outlets flows onto the beach with every rainfall. Marine debris returns with the tide. JMMBA has begun working with district authorities and strategic partners to move from reactive cleaning to a disciplined, source-to-shore approach.

🌊

Outlet rehabilitation

Identifying and stabilising the principal drainage outlets where waste enters the beach from inland channels.

🔬

Waste interception

Installing low-technology interception at controlled discharge points to capture floating plastic and solid waste before it reaches the Indian Ocean.

📊

Evidence and scale

Generating a documented model — quantities, retrieval routines, monitoring data — that can be reviewed by authorities and selectively replicated where justified.

Current status

A Phase 1 concept note has been submitted to the Kinondoni District Commissioner and is under strategic review. JMMBA is seeking administrative recognition and a coordinated technical verification process. This is a public-interest environmental initiative, not a standalone community activity.

Enquire about the pilot →
SDG alignment

The work we do connects to the goals that matter most here.

JMMBA's community and environmental work directly advances seven Sustainable Development Goals — from clean water and marine protection to climate action and community health.

SDG 3 Good Health and Well-Being Good Health
SDG 6 Clean Water and Sanitation Clean Water
SDG 11 Sustainable Cities Sustainable Cities
SDG 12 Responsible Consumption Responsible Consumption
SDG 13 Climate Action Climate Action
SDG 14 Life Below Water Life Below Water
SDG 17 Partnerships for the Goals Partnerships
Partner with us

Support the Ufukwe Wetu campaign.

Organisations, businesses, NGOs, and institutions can sponsor equipment, fund data collection, contribute expertise, or align their ESG and sustainability narratives with measurable community impact at Mbezi Beach A.