In India, recycling depends upon informal waste pickers who scour through waste, pick out recyclable materials and sell them to recyclers. However, their livelihoods are precarious, with irregular and unfair wages—the equivalent of just €1 per day. At the same time, only 29% of waste ends up being recycled.
Social-business entrepreneur Roshan Miranda saw an opportunity to address the environmental challenges of waste recycling while also improving the livelihoods of waste pickers. He co-founded Waste Ventures India, a social business that works with waste pickers to boost their income and India’s recycling efforts.
In Hyderabad, Waste Ventures has created a formal market for recyclables, helping more than 1,300 waste pickers increase their income by up to 25%. And in the last year alone, it has collected more than 674 tons of waste and prevented 2,397 tons of CO2 emissions.
Our partnership with Yunus Social Business supports entrepreneurs like Roshan to grow businesses that offer social benefits to people living in poverty and create 100,000 jobs in India and Kenya.
Since 2018, Yunus Social Business has provided Waste Ventures with financing and support to scale its revenues and impact. Roshan and his team not only received loan funding to cover their upfront payroll but have also gained a close partnership to help them strengthen and expand their business. This has enabled them to reach profitability while doubling the number of waste pickers they work with.
COVID-19 has threatened the survival of many small businesses in India. But thanks to ongoing support from Yunus Social Business during the pandemic, Waste Ventures was able to provide free meals for waste pickers out of a job, while adapting its business model to respond to the situation. Roshan said: “During COVID-19, we have realised that we are not alone at all.”
As 2020 draws to a close, we will continue to work together to support social businesses that achieve the highest social and environmental returns.
With much talk of a “new normal,” social businesses offer a compelling example of how business can be a force for good.
This post was co-authored together with the IKEA Foundation and originally posted on the IKEA Foundation website.
Stories from the two female founders in our Fight for Access Accelerator Nigeria mirror the reality of the burden of young girls without proper access to WASH, but also shine a light on the impact that empowered women in the sector can create.
13 MILLION LIVES AND COUNTING 2020 has been a year like no other - which is why we've taken some time to release our Impact Report. 🌍 We've been busier than ever supporting Social Businesses across the globe and the crisis has even made us consider HOW we communicate our work. One thing is for sure: it's time to make a more inclusive capitalism a reality as soon as possible. 🌻
Since the COVID-19 crisis began in January this year, we at Yunus Social Business have been acutely aware of the potential threat it poses to the populations we support. While governments in wealthy European countries have been subsidising employee salaries, this has not been the case for the emerging countries in which our portfolio Social Businesses operate.