After months of preparation for their pitches, the nine winners from across sub-Saharan Africa of the Afri-Plastics Challenge have been announced at the Afri-Plastics Summit and Awards in Nairobi! In partnership with the Government of Canada and Challenge Works, today the Challenge awards £4.1 million (CA$6.7 million) to innovators with scalable innovations that tackle plastic waste and reduce the volume of pollution making its way to the ocean.

Strand 1 teams have existing solutions that are improving plastic waste management in a socially and environmentally responsible way, to reduce the presence of marine plastic litter across Sub-Saharan Africa. These solutions demonstrated an effective, sustainable and replicable model for significantly increasing their collection and processing of plastic waste, as well as the empowerment of women and girls.

Strand 2 teams work on the development of early-stage products, technology and/or services to encourage the reduction or elimination of plastic usage across Sub-Saharan Africa. Their solutions demonstrated a sustainable approach to reducing the reliance on plastic that also supports the empowerment of women and girls.

Strand 3 teams created campaigns, schemes, tools and other creative interventions that will change both the behaviour of individuals and communities around plastic waste in Sub-Saharan Africa, as well as contribute to the empowerment of women and girls.

And the winners are…

Accelerating Growth - Strand 1 Winners

Awarded £1 million

The GIP-Togo solution consists of setting up collection units and sorting facilities for plastic waste in Togo’s major cities, in collaboration with the local authorities. The purpose of this is to collect and recover plastic waste for recycling purposes.

Awarded £750,000 

Chanja Datti’s solution is a technology driven in-house end-to-end process for plastics waste recycling by purchasing directly from our waste aggregators and waste pickers, who are some of society’s most marginalized people.

Awarded £500,000

Mega Gas converts unsorted plastic waste into clean and affordable cooking gas through a patented process. The company’s main objective is to convert unsorted waste polythene/plastics that litter the environment into clean gaseous fuel.

Creating Solutions - Strand 2 Winners

Awarded £750,000

Chemolex’s solution is a recyclable, reusable and 100% biodegradable material that completely replaces the use of single-use plastic polymers in food and product packaging as well as in manufacturing diapers.

Awarded £250,000

EcoCoCo Homecare is spearheading the development of EcoCoco, a range of multi-purpose everyday home care products (scouring pads scrubbing brushes and brooms) made from compostable natural coconut fibre.

Toto Safi’s solution is a reusable cloth diapers service so that parents do not have to choose between convenience and pollution. Through this app, parents will be able to receive a fresh bundle of sterilised and affordable cloth diapers.

Promoting Change - Strand 3 Winners

Awarded £250,000

Catharina Natang’s solution aims to provide training to fashion designers on sustainable fashion and resource mobilisation and equip local designers to understand the subtle but massive presence of plastic-based fabrics in the fashion industry.

 

Awarded £250,000

Ukwenza VR uses a VR storytelling to showcase the journey of plastic after disposal with hopes to educate users on how plastic waste can end up damaging the environment and encourage people to take better care when disposing of plastic waste.

Awarded £250,000

The #StopPlasticPollution Campaign leverages a mobile App to promote segregation of plastic waste while raising awareness of responsible waste management practices through competitions with cash incentives.

Congratulations to all our winners!

Find out more about the winners and their work

Click here to read this blog in French. Cliquez ici pour lire ce blog en français.

The Afri-Plastics Challenge reveals the 15 finalists of strand 1 & 25 semi-finalists for Strand 2. 

Accelerating Growth: Meet the 15 Finalists for Strand 1!

These finalists have been selected from 30 semi-finalist teams announced in November 2021. Each has already received grants of £10,000 to grow their ideas and demonstrate their scalability in advance of judging. The 15 finalists will now receive a further £100,000 each to advance their solutions to plastic waste management. In addition to financial support, they will receive expert advice and capacity building in the fields of plastic management, human-centered design, market readiness and communications.

Three winners will be announced in March 2023 – first place will be awarded £1 million, second place will be awarded £750,000 and third place will be awarded £500,000.

Learn more about the finalists

Creating Solutions: Meeting the 25 Semi-Finalists for Strand 2!

In addition to the 15 finalists in the Accelerating Growth strand, the Afri-Plastics Challenge has selected the 25 semi-finalists in the Creating Solutions strand.

Each semi-finalist will be supported with a £25,000 grant and additional expert support to develop and validate their solutions. From these semi-finalists, 10 finalists will be selected in June 2022. 

Solutions through to the semi-finals of Strand 2 come from across sub-Saharan Africa, with many developing plant- and nature-based alternatives to plastics in everything from food packaging to construction materials. Several semi-finalists are developing sustainable and plastic-free sanitary products for women and others are working on safe drinking water alternatives that don’t rely on single-use plastic bottles.

Learn more about the semi-finalists

The Afri-Plastics Challenge reveals the 30 semi-finalists of strand 1, Accelerate Growth

The Challenge’s Judging Panel has selected 30 semi-finalist from across Sub-Saharan Africa – Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda. to move forward in the next phase of the challenge.

In July 2021, the Afri-Plastics Challenge announced a call for applications from small and medium enterprises across Sub-Saharan Africa who have a scalable solution or proof of concept that improves plastic waste management in a socially and environmentally responsible way. The shortlisted semi-finalist solutions address the reduction of plastic waste within the wider plastics value chain by reducing marine plastic litter in ways that aim to positively impact their communities.

What’s next for the Semi-Finalists?

In November 2021, the 30 semi-finalists will take part in a Digital Activation Workshop where they will be introduced to a capacity-building support package that will include expert mentoring in the following key areas: Innovation, Plastics, Market-Orientation and Narrative-Building. This will be followed by six weeks of further capacity building support with these mentors to help consolidate plans for scaling solutions. 

The semi-finalists will also be given grants of £10,000 each to support in the development and validation of their scaling plans. At the end of this phase, they will be required to submit a detailed scaling plan together with a pitch video for evaluation by the judges against the criteria. At the end of January 2022, 15 finalists will be selected to move forward in the Challenge and continue their journey to win one of the three final prizes.

Learn more about the semi-finalists