Waste to Wealth Nigeria
Living Earth Foundation has launched a multi-country ‘Waste to Wealth’ project, which responds to the urgent need to improve the lives of the increasing number of improvised and vulnerable people residing in urban slums in sub-Saharan Africa. This project has been implemented by Living Earth Foundation and its local partners in Port Harcourt Nigeria, as well as Kampala (Uganda) and Douala (Cameroon).
Project Aim:
The project aims to create a virtuous circle wherein slum dwellers in 9 urban areas in the cities of Port Harcourt (Nigeria), Douala (Cameroon) and Kampala (Uganda) take responsibility for collecting and managing household solid waste: instead of shipping it off to landfill. Social ventures and micro-enterprises will oversee a process of sorting of waste, recycling and re-use. The project will result in sustained environmental sanitation improvement, with subsequent benefits in health and well being for the slum inhabitants, and the emergence of a skilled and effective business sector wherein social enterprises, founded by and in poor urban communities, derive wealth from the provision of environmental services and derivative recycling and re-use activities. The waste becomes the catalyst for income generation and employment creation.
Programme Background:
For the first time in history over half the world’s population lives in urban areas. The trend of urbanisation is expected to increase markedly, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa where the urban population is forecast to double between 2000 and 2030. Of this urban population over 70% live in slum conditions with the associated problems of un- and underemployment and subsequent low household incomes and widespread poverty.
The growth in population is placing increased demand on the urban environment; there is the same amount of land but more people; the same number of toilets but more human waste; more rubbish and even less space to dispose of it. Widespread poor solid waste management creates associated health problems and poses a threat to surface and groundwater quality. The onus for managing the physical environment in poor areas remains with the communities themselves: if they don’t address the problems of household waste, poor public sanitation, clogged and disease-spreading drainage, no-one will do it for them.
Expected Results (in all three countries):
- Sustained environmental sanitation improvement, with subsequent benefits in health and well-being for the inhabitants, in the 9 target communities through improved service provision as a result of partnerships involving local governments, the private sector and civil society.
- The emergence of a skilled and effective business sector wherein social enterprises, founded by and in poor urban communities, derive wealth from the provision of environmental services and derivative recycling and re-use activities. The role of women in the sector will be promoted.
- Improved awareness among all stakeholders, including policy-makers, of the rights and entitlement of poor urban dwellers to a clean environment and of the potential to harness local cost-effective resources to deliver these rights.
- Enhanced capacity among local authorities to engage in public-private partnership (PPP) development, particularly involving the less formal private sector. Strengthening managerial, technical and organisational abilities of municipalities and addressing statutory limitations will play a key part in achieving this result.
- Improved South-South linkages and networking between partners and associates to increase learning, information dissemination, consensus building and advocacy skills with which to influence policy makers.
- Scaling up of the approach and methodology to other urban centres within the three target countries.
Project activities:
Key project activities in the three countries will include:
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Support 18 micro-projects delivering environmental sanitation services to poor urban residents, implemented by social venture groups and micro and small enterprises (MSEs) in partnership with local authorities
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Build capacity among 120 micro and Small enterprises run by poor urban slum dwellers
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Provide business training to 90 poor urban entrepreneurs
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Provide functional livelihoods skills training to 600 urban slum dwellers
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Raise awareness of rights to a clean environment among slum dwellers
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Support residents’ and vulnerable people’s groups to advocate for rights to a clean urban environment
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Provide advocacy training and support to 180 urban community leaders
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Ensure available information resources on urban environmental rights to up to 210,000 slum dwellers
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Partnership training delivered to 90 local authority officials
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Capacity building in project management for 9 councils addressing urban slum problems
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South-south dialogue (between Nigeria, Cameroon and Uganda) and information sharing facilitated
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Networking platforms for cross-fertilisation and exchange established
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9 seminars on urban environment and poverty held
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3 National conferences on the urban environment held
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Publication of Public-Private Partnerships toolkits and awareness raising materials
Project funding:
The European Commission has committed €1.5 million funding to the project in all three countries. Further co-financing is required and funds are being sought.
