Accueil IN ENGLISH The Kenyan company turning trash into cash

The Kenyan company turning trash into cash

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Mwangi Mboya overlooks the hills of Dandora Municiple Dump Site in Nairobi, Kenya. "I grew up here. These people are my family." Feb. 29, 2020. (Khadija Farah for The Intercept).

MOMO Pencils, based in Athi River, Machakos County, came up with an effective way to reduce the number of trees cut down every year to make simple writing pencils. The company, headed by brothers Mahamud Omari and Rashid Omari, sources its raw materials, in this case glue and old newspapers, locally.

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The company, headed by brothers Mahamud Omari and Rashid Omari, sources its raw materials, in this case glue and old newspapers, locally. They currently import the graphite.

According to CEO Mahamud Omari, the old newspapers cost them just KSH 70 ($0.70) to KSH 100 ($1) per-kilogram.

He says the price of the finished product depends on the quality and quantity, but it ranges from KSH 15 to up to KSH 50 per-pencil.

At the Momo Pencil factory, old newspapers are put through 18 different processes to produce funky, water resistant pencils that they say can last up to three times longer than ordinary pencils.

The pencils are sold to schools, corporate firms, government agencies and through a number of retailers.

Omari, who co-founded the eco-friendly alternative product in 2019, notes that growth in the education and private sectors is driving overall demand.

“About 100 million pencils are imported every year,”Omari tells RFI’s Africa Calling.

“By using recycled newspapers we are helping protect the environment by reducing littering and the number of trees being cut to produce wooden pencils.”

Invented centuries ago, pencils have stood the test of time and remain popular even in the electronic age of smartphones and computers.

Pencils are an important part of life, they’re used for sketching, drawing and in schools.

The United Nations says some eight million trees are cut down every year to make pencils, contributing to deforestation.

came up with an effective way to reduce the number of trees cut down every year to make simple writing pencils.

“If you look at the present day, we are suffering from climate action and the best way is to reduce the number of trees that are cut for any purpose,” he says.

“So, for that matter, 82,000 trees that are cut every year to make pencils, we provide an alternative. We take the newspaper and turn it into a viable product which is a pencil, providing an option for those people to use instead of wooden pencils.”

The process of making pencils starts with newspaper collection.

The newspapers are cut into the right size, then graphite is glued to the pieces.

The pieces of newspapers and graphite are then put into a roller, which rolls and compresses them into pencils.

They’re then left in the sun for three days to dry off.

They’re lastly put into a final compressor, sharpened and packaged.

Mahamud says in the next five years, the company aims to ensure every child in Kenya will use their pencils.

“We want each and every child in Kenya who goes to school to use our pencils and at the same time, be able to plant a tree through our pencil. That way we will reduce the number of trees cut,” he says.

“We will also provide an option and reduce the number of wooden pencils in the market.”

Sustainability consultant and climate change expert Nickson Otieno believes such efforts will reduce the number of trees cut down, while at the same time reducing the amount of wastepaper that’s dumped or burnt.

“Eight million trees are cut down every year to make pencils, and that contributes to deforestation and climate change. Also, about 85 billion tonnes of wastepaper are generated every year and 32 billion tonnes of this wastepaper is dumped and burnt down. Now, this contributes also to climate change, but on the other side, we can address climate change by making pencils from recycled paper,” he says.

According to the UN, over 13 million hectares of forests are lost annually to deforestation, out of which 36 percent is for paper manufacturing and 42 percent is for manufacturing timber-based products that constitutes about 18-20 billion pencils.

Yesterday’s news, tomorrow’s pencils.

Piers Potter

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