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"To fight climate change it has to be business unusual," says the head of the Kenya Climate Innovation Center
Plastic littering the streets of Kariobangi is an eyesore for many residents. But for Aghan Oscar it spells opportunity.
Now his company,
Continental Renewable Energy (COREC), produces poles for use in
construction, farming, and road signage. So far he's sold 96,000, and he
says his potential for growth is limited only by the considerable
expense of setting up plastic recycling plants.
He and others are calling on the Kenyan government to do more to support entrepreneurship for conservation.
Most of Aghan's
customers are farmers and developers who once used wooden fence poles.
COREC's solid black polythene poles are more durable and cheaper than
timber, he says.
Customers say they have other benefits as well. "I have fenced my
piece of land three times using wood posts, but most of the time the
fence was vandalised by villagers who used the posts as firewood," said
Caleb Kapten, one of Aghan's customers from Bungoma in western Kenya.
Now plastic posts have stopped the problem, he said.
The Kenya National
Highways Authority is one of COREC's biggest customers. It approached
the company after road signs were vandalized by criminals who sold the
metal poles to steel manufacturing companies.
"So far we have
sold (the Highways Authority) 28,000 poles," Aghan said, He reckons that
COREC's products have saved the government millions of shillings,
besides preventing road accidents.
"When I started
this recycling venture in 2003, most of my employees were my family
members due to financial constraints," Aghan said. Now he employs 250
young people to collect plastic waste - the first step in the production
process.
Fifty more youths
work on the production line, where the waste is sorted according to
quality before being crushed and washed, melted and moulded into
different shapes. The poles are then arranged by shape and size for sale
in the yard of the recycling plant.
'BUSINESS UNUSUAL'
Aghan would like to
scale up his production to meet growing demand. His machines can only
handle 80-100 tonnes of plastic per month, and he has plans to double
his capacity - but the cost of the recycling machinery is a serious
constraint.
He says more should
be done to support recycling since it can be a source of employment for
many young people. Other people have approached him for advice about
starting recycling plants of their own, he said, but they are put off by
the high start-up and operating costs.
Oscar Ochieng, a
solid waste management strategist at World Vision, a non-governmental
organisation that has incorporated environmental conservation in its
programmes, said he agrees that start-up costs and the high cost of
maintaining imported recycling machines scare away many potential
climate change entrepreneurs. He believes government tax break would
help.
Richard Mwendandu,
director of multilateral environmental agreements in the Kenyan
environment ministry, said the government has not created these kinds of
tax breaks, but has been running media campaigns promoting recycling
and reuse of plastic waste.
Thirteen years ago,
Aghan, bothered by the ever-increasing quantity of plastic waste in
this low-income suburb of Nairobi, decided to find a way to recycle it.
Aghan points out that COREC has been able to conserve large numbers of trees by producing plastic poles.
"One kilogram of
plastic waste saves 2.5kg of carbon emissions, and for every 10 plastic
posts produced, one tree is saved. Recycling is definitely the best bet
in conserving the environment," he said.
Edward Mungai,
chief executive of the Climate Innovation Center, a non-governmental
body supported by the World Bank that supports climate innovators, says
entrepreneurs such as Aghan should be encouraged with financial and
marketing support and training.
"To fight climate
change it has to be business unusual," Mungai said. "Let's help and
encourage climate innovators and entrepreneurs through financing
start-ups. We must think outside the box."
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