Similarly, Emmanuel Mac-Boima started his company, Shae Recycling, after noticing the large piles of garbage around his community and wanting to find a solution, while Abu Bakarr Kargbo quit his job in the mining sector to start Global Recycling Company, which manufactures paving tiles out of recycled plastic bottles.
Although they all came upon their business ideas in different ways, one thing these entrepreneurs have in common is that they saw a problem in their communities, and instead of looking away, they decided to tackle it.
Aside from some city bylaws, Sierra Leone has very limited waste management legislation on the books, and the municipal governments lack the resources to operate robust waste management programs, let alone recycling.
That’s why when Mac-Boima kept walking past heaps of trash in his community on his way to and from work, he didn’t ignore the issue. “I realized that the ministry or the government institution that is responsible for handling that kind of rubbish, which is the Freetown City Council, don’t have enough capacity, and they are underutilized, and they don’t have enough resources,” says Mac-Boima. “That’s why the idea or the inspiration came to me: what can we do, or what can I do as an individual?”
Mac-Boima’s company, Shae Recycling, began offering a service to households: for a very small fee, local youth will collect their organic and non-recyclable waste. Although it took some convincing, Mac-Boima says people have slowly become more receptive to the idea, once they recognize the positive health impacts and job-creation benefits. And community members can actually get paid for the plastic waste they hand over to Shae employees because there’s a nascent market for it.
Shae Recycling, Global Recycling Company, and Kangama Trading all use a similar formula to make tiles and paving bricks out of used plastic bottles and sand. This has created a lot of casual labour jobs, because unemployed people can collect plastic bottles around the city and sell them by the bag.