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Sexy trash cans? This Swedish city is taking a risqué approach to garbage

<i>Adobe Stock</i><br/>The Swedish city of Malmö is taking dirty talk to a whole new level in its latest effort to clean up the streets
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The Swedish city of Malmö is taking dirty talk to a whole new level in its latest effort to clean up the streets

By Jack Bantock, CNN

The Swedish city of Malmö is taking dirty talk to a whole new level in its latest effort to clean up the streets.

By installing talking garbage cans that dish out racy audio messages after being fed trash, authorities are hoping for an increase in rubbish being deposited.

Pedestrians that drop trash into one of two bins on the city’s Davidshallsbron bridge are rewarded with extremely positive feedback from a sultry female voice, who offers a range of responses.

“Oh, right there, yes!”, “Come back soon and do that again!” and “Mmm, a bit more to the left next time,” feature among the programmed messages.

While the seductive approach is a fresh tactic, trash cans with voices are not a new addition to Sweden’s third-largest city. In 2017, the city council bought 18 talking cans, though today only two still speak, according to CNN affiliate Expressen.

During the pandemic, they thanked depositors for adhering to social distancing regulations, but a new era calls for a new method, the city road department’s section chief believes.

“The sentences are part of the campaign’s intention to get more people to talk about the dirtiest thing there is: littering,” said Marie Persson, according to The Local, quoting Swedish newspaper Sydsvenskan.

“So please go ahead and feed the bins with more rubbish…yes, just like that.”

Malmö has long been renowned as a pioneer in eco-friendly living, so its latest innovation should perhaps come as no surprise. The city’s eco-drive is epitomized by “Bo01 – City of Tomorrow” — a project launched in 2001 — that has transformed a polluted, defunct shipyard in the city into a green, sustainable living district. All energy needs for homes, shops and office buildings in the area are met with renewable sources, with food waste converted to biogas to run local buses.

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CNN’s Henrik Pettersson contributed to this report.

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