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SCHWAB
FOUNDATION
FOR SOCIAL ENTREPRENUEURSHIP |
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Maqsood Sinha, Waste Concern, BANGLADESH
Iftekhar Enayetullah, Waste Concern, BANGLADESH
Founded in: 1995
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About Schwab
Foundation
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Sinha,
born and raised in Dhaka, is an urban planner-architect. Enayetullah,
also from Bangladesh, is a civil engineer-urban planner. The pair
met while completing their separate graduate research on urban waste
management and decided to work together to develop programs in this
area. Initially, the two young entrepreneurs sought to convince
government agencies to develop the community-based composting plants,
even promising free consulting services to support governmental
efforts. But they could not convince the authorities. One government
official listened to their ideas and then challenged them: if their
ideas for community-managed compost plants were so great, why didn't
they create it themselves? Inspired by the challenge, they founded
Waste Concern.
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MISSION:
The Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship seeks to identify,
recognize and disseminate initiatives in social entrepreneurship
that have significantly improved people's lives and have the potential
to be adapted to other settings.
To accomplish its mission the Schwab Foundation:
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- Promotes social entrepreneurship
as crucial to ensuring solutions to the problems of the 21st century
- Builds and supports
a global community of outstanding social entrepreneurs.
VISION:
Global advancement can best be sustained by widespread and systematic
recognition and support of innovative social value creation by social
entrepreneurs.
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INNOVATION |
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By
promoting the concept of waste as a resource and emphasizing on
the marketing aspect of organic waste, Waste Concern is causing
a chain reaction among multiple sectors in Bangladesh. Working in
partnership with communities, Waste Concern has set in motion a
process for house-to-house solid waste collection that is then taken
to community-based composting plants to turn the waste into organic
fertilizer. Waste Concern arranges for fertilizer companies to purchase
and nationally market the compost-based enriched bio-fertilizers
it produces. Waste Concern thus provides jobs for urban poor that
collect the waste and work in the local plants and stimulates behavioural
changes in urban communities and the waste management industry.
In addition, Waste Concern helps to address the environmental problem
of diminishing topsoil fertility due to the use of synthetic fertilizers
and pesticides in Bangladesh. At present, 30,000 people are benefited
from Waste Concern's project in Dhaka. Every year, Waste Concern
produces 500 tons of compost, but the demand from farmers is rising
so much that the fertilizer company marketing it estimates present
demand at 10,000 tons per year. Because of its novel approach, Waste
Concern has received wide media coverage and recognition. Iftekhar
Enayetullah and Maqsood Sinha, Waste Concern's founders, are winners
of Fast Company's first Fast 50 competition, the only ones from
Asia. Delegations from several countries have visited Waste Concern
and started replicating the model in their own cities. Closer to
home, several NGOs have already emulated the model in Bangladesh.
UNICEF and Department of Public Health Engineering have started
to do the same in 14 municipalities throughout the country.
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| BACKGROUND |
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Initially,
no local financial institution or development organization supported
Waste Concern. After three years of running their demonstration
program with no external support, Enayetullah and Sinha finally
convinced the Municipal Corporation and Public Works Department
to provide public land for community composting. Waste Concern's
first community based compost project was initiated in 1995. Successful
demonstration of the project spurred the model's replication to
five more communities of Dhaka. Moreover, based on the project,
the Government of Bangladesh has recommended in its national policy,
the recycling of organic waste via composting as a viable alternative
for solid waste management.
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STRATEGY |
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Success
of a community-based program depends largely on identifying and
addressing the community's needs, while sustainability of the project
depends on involving them in the cost-recovery/cost-sharing process.
To that end, Waste Concern has established partnerships with public
agencies, private sector and communities by working as intermediary
to form the tri- partite partnership. Each relationship is important
in the public-private-community link. Communities are responsible
for monitoring house-to-house waste collection system and contribute
towards its cost. The Ministry of the Environment and Forest, through
its Sustainable Environment Management Program, coordinates the
project and provides strategic support on behalf of the central
government. Local government provides land for the composting plant
as well as the electrical connections and other logistics. UNDP
has provided start-up funds for the composting units while the private
sector markets the compost. An effort such as Waste Concern's requires
that land is provided at a nominal rate or free of cost to the entrepreneurs
interested in running the project; public-private partnerships to
underpin the initiative; and training and technical advice on composting
and its marketing for the communities involved in the effort
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