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Unilever, BOP sign $2m partnership for waste-to-wealth, job creation

From left: Communications and Sustainable Business Lead, Unilever Nigeria, Godfrey Adejumoh; Chief Operating Officer, Wecyclers, Oluwayemisi Lawal; Managing Director, Unilever West Africa, Carl Cruz, and Chief Executive Officer, Wecyclers, Olawale Adebiyi during the Unilever Nigeria and Wecyclers Joint Press Conference to announce Unilever’s partnership to help social enterprise, Wecyclers, expand plastic waste collection in Nigeria, held in Lagos on Monday.

By Mayor Izuchukwu

Unilever Nigeria and Bridges Outcomes Partnerships (BOP) have agreed on a $2 million partnership to help social enterprise Wecyclers expand plastic waste collection in Nigeria.

This partnership, set up through an innovative “Development Impact Bond” structured by French investment bank, Societe Generale, will allow Wecyclers to create hundreds of jobs scaling up operations that take plastics waste out of the environment and turn it into raw material for industry.

Unilever Nigeria and Wecyclers have been working together since 2014 as part of Unilever’s ‘waste to wealth’ campaign, which helps local organisations work out how to create value and jobs from the reduction, collection, recycling, and reusing of plastic waste.  

This unique Development Impact Bond includes social, environmental, and financial targets, which will see Wecyclers collect more than 30,000 tonnes of plastic waste over the next five years, create over 700 jobs in recycling franchises across Nigeria, and improve the incomes of thousands of waste sorters.

Under this partnership, seed funding from Unilever, the UK Government and EY joint project called TRANSFORM, helped Wecyclers expand their successful franchise and collection model.

However, as an entrepreneurial social enterprise, Wecyclers lacked access to the long-term funding needed to build on that progress and significantly scale up this model.

This unique Development Impact Bond provides a solution to that challenge. It includes social, environmental, and financial targets, which will see Wecyclers collect more than 30,000 tonnes of plastic waste over the next five years, create over 700 jobs in recycling franchises across Nigeria, and improve the incomes of thousands of waste sorters.

Commenting, the Managing Director, Unilever Nigeria, Carl Cruz, said: “This funding is a major step forward for us in our work to ensure plastics waste stays out of the Nigerian environment.”

He added, “It shows there is wealth to be made from creating jobs tackling plastics waste, it cleans up the Nigerian environment and it develops a more sustainable financing model for groups like Wecyclers.”

Similarly, the Managing Director, Wecyclers, Wale Adebiyi, said: “We started with one bicycle and a dream, and through hard work and entrepreneurship we have built a scalable model that, thanks to this Development Impact Bond, will create hundreds of jobs, and improve the income of thousands of sorters, who will earn 25% more than they do today.”

All the partners involved expressed the hope that this experience in Nigeria will inspire further development and the use of such bonds globally to finance organisations tackling similar challenges.

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