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The Alliance is projected to introduce more and better circular systems that can enable cities to minimize waste volumes and enhance waste management, benefiting the environment, public health, and the urban economy. Economic activities for resource recovery, reuse, and recycling, in particular, may help create employment for rising urban populations.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Climate change and environmental damage have led to an ecological crisis around the world, negatively impacting multiple countries. Environmental concerns along with discussions regarding possible recovery plans from the social and economic crisis caused by the pandemic are bringing up circularity as a potential solution to global problems. However, there is still a lack of knowledge, clarity, action, and collaboration around circular economy goals in countries. 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Participants will address the need for a green recovery in a post-pandemic world and will look in particular at how sustainable development can tackle the unsustainable patterns that have driven environmental degradation and led to these crises.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>The Global Alliance on Circular Economy and Resource Efficiency (GACERE) aims to put governments and organisations together in order to provide a global momentum for circular economy initiatives, resource efficiency, and sustainable production and consumption. It will build on international efforts and place the EU at the forefront of the green transition. 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Increase market value of land is also expected in association with the significant improvements to the project site.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>More importantly, reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions through the avoidance of landfilling municipal solid waste (“MSW”).\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Solid waste managemet remains one of the biggest challenge in Quezon City (QC).\u003C/p>\u003Cp>According to the Waste Analysis and Characterization Study (WACS) conducted by the QC Environmental Environmental Protection and Waste Management Department (EPWMD), the city produced about 3,169,220 kg of solid waste everyday in 2018, mostly coming from residential use. From another study conducted in 2013, waste generation per capita was at 0.88 kg/day, and increasing by 3.33% every year.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Quezon City Local Government, \"LGU\", initiated a public-private partnership project to design, finance, and operate a biodegradable source separated organics (SSO) treatment facility and a residual combustible waste (RCW) treatment facility. The project is expected to provide the LGU with a sustainable, environmentally friendly, and cheaper waste disposal solution to tackle solid waste management challenges in the city.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>The QC Local Government, \"LGU\", initiated a public-private partnership project called the \"Integrated Solid Waste Management Facility Project\" in 2018.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The consortium composed of Metro Pacific Investments Corporation, Covanta Energy LLC, and Macquarie Capital Limited (the “Original Proponent”) who submitted the project as an unsolicited proposal (“USP”) to the LGU.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The Project involves Biodegradable Source Separated Waste (SSO) Treatment and Residual Combustible Waste (RCW) Treatment technologies capable of processing up to 3,000 metric tons of MSW per day and generating 36 MWe (Net), as well as monofill for fly ash disposal, continuous emission monitoring system, administration building, scale house, transmission lines, and utility systems and connections.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The indicative cost of the project would be up to PhP 22 billion (around €403 million), and revenues would be generated from tipping fees, power generation fees, and sale of by-products (e.g recycleables, digestate).\u003C/p>",[327,329],{"name":328,"type":276,"value":328},"https://ppp.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/PPPC_PROJ_QC-Intgrated-Proj-Info-Memo.pdf",{"name":330,"type":276,"value":330},"https://quezoncity.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Eco_Profile_2018_Chapter-5.pdf",{"id":17,"type":194,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":332,"updated_at":333,"owner_id":284,"owner_relationship":197,"views":189,"owner":334,"image":335,"contributors":339,"article_locations":345,"article_industries":348,"view_count":189,"like_count":185,"collection_count":317,"content":355,"can_edit":280},"2021-02-01T16:32:54.161Z","2026-05-27T13:06:20.555Z",{"id":284,"type":5,"owner_id":284,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":336,"link":337,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":332,"updated_at":338,"article_id":17,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"XEPwQH-WScw=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778092643941-H7PYFeKa.jpeg","2024-01-11T15:37:26.325Z",[340,341,342,343,344],{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":294},{"contributor_id":296},{"contributor_id":284},{"contributor_id":301},[346],{"article_id":17,"location_id":304,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"location":347},{"id":304,"type":307,"name":308,"color":6,"parent_location_id":309,"created_at":249,"updated_at":6},[349],{"article_id":17,"industry_id":350,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"industry":351},"agriculture",{"id":350,"name":352,"description":353,"sector":354},"Agriculture","Producing and gathering crop and animal products from land and water through farming, hunting, and fishing","agri_food",{"id":356,"score":185,"body":357,"status":279,"article_id":17,"created_at":332,"updated_at":338,"published_at":332},"zHh2",{"title":358,"outcome":359,"problem":360,"summary":361,"solution":362,"attachment":363},"Quezon City's urban agriculture programme","\u003Cp>More than 43,000 individuals have visited the “Joy of Urban Farming”, and from three demo farms, the city now hosts 166 urban farms which can be found in different barangays (inner city neighbourhoods), public elementary schools, day-care centers, parishes, and even in areas maintained by the various non-government organizations (NGOs) from Districts 1 to 6 in Quezon City. It is expeted that all farms will become self-funding and sustainable in the long run.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>In the near future, the local government of Quezon City might also be able to institutionalize urban farming through ordinances and appropriate programs to cover all the barangays in the city, including more elementary and high schools.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>There is a presisting mindset that farming is not compatible with the city. Meanwhile, due to many factors, there is also a growing concern that people living in urban areas are not getting enough access to safe and healthy diet.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>To improve nutrition, alleviate poverty, and convince people living in urban Quezon City to produce their own food which will be safer and healthier, the local government partnered with several departments, various NGOs, and Allied Botanical Corporation (ABC), to establish urban farms producing green leafy vegetables around the city.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>The Quezon City government partnered with Department of Agriculture (DA), Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), Department of Education (DepED), various NGOs, and Allied Botanical Corporation (ABC), a Filipino-owned seed and crop care products company, to implement the \"Joy of Urban Farming\" program.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The main objectives of the program are to improve nutrition, alleviate poverty, protect the environment by not using chemical fertilizers, and change the mindset of people that farming is not compatible with the city -- eventually trying to convince people to adopt the idea of cultivating their own, which will provide them with a safe and healthy diet.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The program is funded by the Vice Mayor’s office, while the DA and the DENR provide financial grants, and ABC supplies with planting materials.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The first demo farm was established in 2010 at the Quezon Memorial Circle. The farm used to be just a 750-square metres area but was moved to a better site in 2014, and now has an area of 1,500 square metres.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>For creating additional planting spaces, recycled plastic soda bottles are used. Green leafy vegetables such as lettuce, pechay, and upland kangkong are commonly planted. Since they have shallow roots, recycled containers can be used. The three R's (reduce, reuse, recycle) principle is thus applied.\u003C/p>",[364],{"name":365,"type":276,"value":365},"https://www.agriculture.com.ph/2018/10/08/the-joy-of-urban-farming-in-quezon-city/",{"id":81,"type":367,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":368,"updated_at":369,"owner_id":284,"owner_relationship":197,"views":370,"owner":371,"image":372,"contributors":376,"article_locations":383,"article_industries":390,"view_count":370,"like_count":185,"collection_count":185,"content":393,"can_edit":280},"business_case","2021-02-01T16:39:01.874Z","2026-05-26T19:52:52.350Z",4,{"id":284,"type":5,"owner_id":284,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":373,"link":374,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":368,"updated_at":375,"article_id":81,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"uiLf1LfYMfE=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778156915589-XgfmtRTW.jpeg","2023-04-14T10:04:33.267Z",[377,378,379,380,382],{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":296},{"contributor_id":284},{"contributor_id":381},"RQGQFw",{"contributor_id":299},[384],{"article_id":81,"location_id":385,"created_at":386,"updated_at":6,"location":387},"1648473","2026-05-07T12:28:21.627Z",{"id":385,"type":307,"name":388,"color":6,"parent_location_id":389,"created_at":249,"updated_at":6},"Bogor","IDN",[391],{"article_id":81,"industry_id":312,"created_at":386,"updated_at":6,"industry":392},{"id":312,"name":314,"description":315,"sector":316},{"id":394,"score":185,"body":395,"status":279,"article_id":81,"created_at":368,"updated_at":375,"published_at":368},"vZfD",{"title":396,"outcome":397,"problem":398,"summary":399,"solution":400,"attachment":401},"British company to build waste-to-fuel plants in Bogor","\u003Cp>Each plant is expected to daily process 70 tons of low-grade plastic waste, including plastic bags and wrappers, and convert it to fuel. For every ton of plastic waste, the plant can produce 860 liters of fuel, comprising 80 percent diesel and 20 percent naphtha.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Bogor City produces 600 tons of waste per day, of which 13 percent is plastic waste.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>To minimize plastic waste, Bogor local government signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with British recycling company, Plastic Energy Limited, to build plastic waste-to-oil facility in the final disposal site in Galuga Village. It is expected that for every ton of plastic waste processed, 860 litres of fuel will be produced.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>To minimize plastic waste in the city, Bogor local government released the \"Botak\" program, or Bogor with no-plastic bags.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>In alignment to the program, they have also signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the British recycling company, Plastic Energy Limited, to process plastic waste at the Galuga disposal site. The company has the technology to transform plastic waste into diesel oil through the process of pyrolysis, and they are planning to build five waste-to-fuel plants costing $40 million each across West Java.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Following the signing of the MoU, the London-based company will require approval from both the Bogor district and Bogor city administrations to build the plant.\u003C/p>",[402],{"name":403,"type":276,"value":403},"https://en.antaranews.com/news/140465/bogor-approves-foreign-investment-to-construct-plastic-to-oil-facility",{"id":79,"type":367,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":405,"updated_at":406,"owner_id":284,"owner_relationship":197,"views":370,"owner":407,"image":408,"contributors":412,"article_locations":415,"article_industries":420,"view_count":370,"like_count":185,"collection_count":185,"content":423,"can_edit":280},"2021-02-01T16:37:54.412Z","2026-05-26T21:11:30.472Z",{"id":284,"type":5,"owner_id":284,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":409,"link":410,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":405,"updated_at":411,"article_id":79,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"hgQN5WlelsY=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778156915028-QwrNuzaQ.jpeg","2023-03-22T13:06:58.885Z",[413,414],{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":284},[416],{"article_id":79,"location_id":417,"created_at":386,"updated_at":6,"location":418},"184745",{"id":417,"type":307,"name":419,"color":6,"parent_location_id":241,"created_at":214,"updated_at":6},"Nairobi",[421],{"article_id":79,"industry_id":312,"created_at":386,"updated_at":6,"industry":422},{"id":312,"name":314,"description":315,"sector":316},{"id":424,"score":185,"body":425,"status":279,"article_id":79,"created_at":405,"updated_at":411,"published_at":405},"G9y7",{"title":426,"outcome":427,"problem":428,"summary":429,"solution":430,"attachment":431},"Takataka Solutions in Nairobi recycles 95% of the waste it collects","\u003Cp>Takataka Solutions collects 60 tonnes of waste from Nairobi daily. The company recycles plastic containers and packaging, composts food waste, and collaborates with recycling partners to recycle other products, resulting in recycling 95% of the waste they collect. In addition, they have more than 350 full-time staff and operate multiple sites in the Nairobi Metropolitan Area:\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>• Three sorting sites\u003C/p>\u003Cp>• One composting plant\u003C/p>\u003Cp>• Two plastic recycling plants (containers and flexibles)\u003C/p>\u003Cp>• One incinerator\u003C/p>\u003Cp>• Three buy-back centers\u003C/p>\u003Cp>• Free waste management services for low-income schools\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Cities across East Africa are increasingly expanding, but there is no waste management system in place to handle the rising waste volumes. Current waste disposal practices are hazardous to both human and environmental health. In the Nairobi Metropolitan Area, 50% of the 4,000 tons of waste generated per day goes uncollected and the remaining 50% is disposed of at different landfills. Less than 10% of waste accumulated gets recycled.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>TakaTaka Solutions is recycling 57 tonnes of waste daily on average in Nairobi instead of having the waste end up in landfills, and therefore polluting the soil, water, and air. They offer easy waste management services on-site for households and businesses and then collect, sort and convert the organic waste into compost, a natural soil amendment, at their composting plant, and process plastic containers and packaging into high-value plastic flakes and pellets at recycling plants.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Takataka Solutions offers waste management services for households and for businesses to help to separate and recycling in Kenya and develop proper separation of wastes at source. They collect and take waste to their sorting plants. Then convert the organic waste into compost, a natural soil amendment, at their composting plant, and process plastic containers and packaging into high-value plastic flakes and pellets at recycling plants. These are then used by local manufacturers to make new plastic products. For the rest of the waste collected that remains, they work with external recycling partners for other recyclables like paper, cardboard, glass, and many other materials. For households, they make sorting, treating, and storing waste simpler, and offer a range of bins and bin liners along with solutions for specialized waste such as garden and bulky waste. For businesses, they offer in-depth waste analysis, support setting up take-back systems and Extended Producer Responsibility requirements, as well as consulting about environmental positioning for their business models.\u003C/p>",[432,434],{"name":433,"type":276,"value":433},"https://takatakasolutions.com/about-us/",{"name":435,"type":276,"value":435},"https://www.giz.de/en/mediacenter/78669.html",{"id":61,"type":367,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":437,"updated_at":438,"owner_id":439,"owner_relationship":197,"views":440,"owner":441,"image":442,"contributors":446,"article_locations":453,"article_industries":467,"view_count":440,"like_count":185,"collection_count":317,"content":474,"can_edit":280},"2021-02-16T12:22:30.634Z","2026-05-27T09:41:49.463Z","-rHMCQ",6,{"id":439,"type":5,"owner_id":439,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":443,"link":444,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":437,"updated_at":445,"article_id":61,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"TMGcUWidfd0=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778096325297-0kWNxACL.jpeg","2022-09-29T12:13:27.176Z",[447,449,450,452],{"contributor_id":448},"1B19aQ",{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":451},"o74umQ",{"contributor_id":439},[454,459,463],{"article_id":61,"location_id":455,"created_at":456,"updated_at":6,"location":457},"UGA","2026-05-06T19:13:28.601Z",{"id":455,"type":211,"name":458,"color":6,"parent_location_id":213,"created_at":214,"updated_at":6},"Uganda",{"article_id":61,"location_id":460,"created_at":456,"updated_at":6,"location":461},"229380",{"id":460,"type":307,"name":462,"color":6,"parent_location_id":455,"created_at":214,"updated_at":6},"Masaka",{"article_id":61,"location_id":213,"created_at":456,"updated_at":6,"location":464},{"id":213,"type":253,"name":465,"color":466,"parent_location_id":6,"created_at":214,"updated_at":6},"Africa","#47CEC0",[468],{"article_id":61,"industry_id":469,"created_at":456,"updated_at":6,"industry":470},"construction_materials_and_products",{"id":469,"name":471,"description":472,"sector":473},"Construction Materials and Products","Producing building materials and finished and semi-finished building products for construction","construction_and_infrastructure",{"id":475,"score":185,"body":476,"status":279,"article_id":61,"created_at":437,"updated_at":445,"published_at":437},"jruO",{"title":477,"problem":478,"summary":479,"solution":480,"attachment":481},"Eco Brixs - Tackling plastic waste and unemployment","\u003Cp>About 600 tonnes of plastics are generated in Uganda every day. Some 90% of this is sent to landfill or burnt illegally, as there is no formal means of waste collection. A small proportion is collected, pelletised and shipped to markets such as China and India to be used as raw materials. However, this unmanaged plastic waste is a tremendous opportunity. It can be recycled to make construction materials with a smaller environmental footprint, and in the process create jobs to help tackle Uganda’s high unemployment rate.&nbsp;\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Eco Brixs is a closed-loop recycling system providing employment and creating a positive environmental impact in Masaka, Uganda\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Eco Brixs started in 2017 as the Masaka Recycling Initiative, at which point it focused on plastic recovery. After two years of operation, Andy realised more could be done to capture the value in plastics as well as support the local economy, and Eco Brixs was born. In collaboration with universities and other experts they have researched how to transform the plastic. Now, they recycle seven types of plastics to make various products, such as an innovative plastic-sand composite paver, which has proven to be stronger, lighter and more durable than concrete. A series of other prototypes are in the pipeline. Eco Brixs’ other focus is on creating jobs – especially for people with disabilities – supporting the local economy and educating people on plastic waste. They have set up 20 recycling centres in different communities across Uganda. They also collaborate with schools to educate students on good environmental practices, establishing 31 ‘Eco Clubs’ with over 900 students. More recently, to support COVID-19 efforts, Eco Brixs have produced PPE from recycled plastics.\u003C/p>",[482,484,486,488,490,492],{"name":483,"type":276,"value":483},"https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/40a0e554/files/uploaded/CEcasereport_Footprints.pdf",{"name":485,"type":276,"value":485},"https://grid-arendal.maps.arcgis.com/apps/instant/minimalist/index.html?appid=1fd04bafbafc4cb2be8bdf5100382932",{"name":487,"type":276,"value":487},"http://www.ecobrixs.org/",{"name":489,"type":276,"value":489},"https://twitter.com/BrixsEco",{"name":491,"type":276,"value":491},"https://www.instagram.com/eco_brixs/",{"name":493,"type":276,"value":493},"https://www.facebook.com/Masaka-Recycling-Initiative-493483934358631/",{"id":45,"type":194,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":495,"updated_at":496,"owner_id":497,"owner_relationship":197,"views":317,"owner":498,"image":6,"contributors":499,"article_locations":504,"article_industries":507,"view_count":317,"like_count":185,"collection_count":317,"content":510,"can_edit":280},"2021-02-01T16:39:06.823Z","2026-05-27T13:53:38.530Z","nK50NQ",{"id":497,"type":5,"owner_id":497,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},[500,501,502,503],{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":497},{"contributor_id":381},{"contributor_id":299},[505],{"article_id":45,"location_id":385,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"location":506},{"id":385,"type":307,"name":388,"color":6,"parent_location_id":389,"created_at":249,"updated_at":6},[508],{"article_id":45,"industry_id":312,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"industry":509},{"id":312,"name":314,"description":315,"sector":316},{"id":511,"score":185,"body":512,"status":279,"article_id":45,"created_at":495,"updated_at":518,"published_at":495},"_0Oe",{"title":513,"summary":514,"attachment":515},"Community-based solid waste management in Bogor City","\u003Cp>Bogor City uses a strategy to tackle unsustainable solid waste disposal by developing the 3R approach (reduce, reuse, recycle) at a community level. This research is based on a qualitative approach including literature review, interview with stakeholders and field observation to evaluate the performance of this TPS3R program. It concludes that the waste services level of Bogor City at the end of 2015 has reached 72% while the TPS3R existing only able to process 3.17% of total waste generation, leaving a big gap to achieve the 100% access target. In addition, the&nbsp;income of TPS3R has not been able to cover operational and maintenance costs.\u003C/p>",[516],{"name":517,"type":276,"value":517},"https://bpsdm.pu.go.id/kms/admin/_assets/uploads/adminkms/papers/PIW/KMS_STUDI_20180724054702.pdf","2022-07-15T14:19:22.134Z",{"id":57,"type":367,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":520,"updated_at":521,"owner_id":522,"owner_relationship":197,"views":523,"owner":524,"image":525,"contributors":529,"article_locations":539,"article_industries":546,"view_count":523,"like_count":185,"collection_count":317,"content":552,"can_edit":280},"2020-11-24T08:18:56.427Z","2026-05-26T10:33:21.357Z","t0lH6w",14,{"id":522,"type":5,"owner_id":522,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":526,"link":527,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":520,"updated_at":528,"article_id":57,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"lVOE5uHVEck=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778096303153-bx35Ob4u.jpeg","2022-07-05T11:57:51.907Z",[530,531,533,535,537,538],{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":532},"bd1tUw",{"contributor_id":534},"ebO-3Q",{"contributor_id":536},"nvtrLQ",{"contributor_id":439},{"contributor_id":522},[540,542],{"article_id":57,"location_id":213,"created_at":456,"updated_at":6,"location":541},{"id":213,"type":253,"name":465,"color":466,"parent_location_id":6,"created_at":214,"updated_at":6},{"article_id":57,"location_id":543,"created_at":456,"updated_at":6,"location":544},"EGY",{"id":543,"type":211,"name":545,"color":6,"parent_location_id":213,"created_at":214,"updated_at":6},"Egypt",[547],{"article_id":57,"industry_id":548,"created_at":456,"updated_at":6,"industry":549},"food_and_beverage",{"id":548,"name":550,"description":551,"sector":354},"Food and Beverage","Processing and producing food and beverages for consumption",{"id":553,"score":185,"body":554,"status":279,"article_id":57,"created_at":520,"updated_at":528,"published_at":520},"Pgtu",{"title":555,"outcome":556,"problem":557,"summary":558,"solution":559,"attachment":560},"TeKeya - Mobile app for reducing food waste","\u003Cp>For food providers, the app adds profits and minimizes loss and for customers, everything is sold at a 50% discount. The company works with a start-up in Sweden and is already present in 17 countries globally. Their app helps grocery store managers better assess the shelf life of their products and helps them with dynamic discounts. Tekeya creates an API integration: the better the application works, the more surplus there will be and the more potential supply. They also work with an Egyptian start-up, where the focus is on bigger surplus food - coming from wholesalers and big suppliers. They have also, partnered with 75 certified charities in Egypt.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>  \u003C/p>\u003Cp>The company is looking for a strategic start-up partnership with a player that’s on the supplier side as the volumes are bigger and could be channeled through the app to other players like restaurants, and possibly other retailers too.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Around the world, 1/3 of food produced is wasted each year. In the Middle East/North African region, which is TeKeya’s target market, that translates to 250kg of edible food getting thrown out per person each year. Along with the immense ratio of people living below the poverty line, who often cannot afford nutritious meals, food waste is a crucial issue that needs to be addressed urgently.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>TeKeya, a newly developed app in Egypt is contributing to more circular food consumption habits. The app targets unserved ready meals or baked goods in restaurants, previously refrigerated items, or uneaten buffet servings. Consumers can buy food from the app at a reduced price– whatever is unsold is donated to those in need, generating value instead of waste. The app also enables food businesses to quantify their food waste and provides them with suggestions on how to reduce their waste.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Tekeya is a digital app that connects customers with leftover food from supermarkets and restaurants. Originally Tekeya was established after seeing that lots of food were not being sold in restaurants or supermarkets while still perfectly edible. The founder wanted to use all the experience gained from working as a corporate Vice President. Retail was an easy entry point for app development, but eventually, the goal is to work up the value chain step by step. They are looking to expand in Egypt to delta cities, adding potential 3M customers. In addition, they’re looking across borders, first Middle East and potentially elsewhere in Africa too.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>In addition to their marketplace app, they’ve developed a donation platform. They have a subscription platform and work with corporations, that provide monthly payments through their CSR budgets. For consumers, there is an opportunity to purchase as donations.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The company is a for-profit social enterprise that has few revenue models. The app is a marketplace with two forms: B2C marketplace directly to consumers (a percentage commission per transaction) and a B2B marketplace being piloted.\u003C/p>",[561],{"name":562,"type":276,"value":562},"https://www.tekeya.io/",{"id":51,"type":194,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":564,"updated_at":565,"owner_id":294,"owner_relationship":197,"views":566,"owner":567,"image":6,"contributors":568,"article_locations":572,"article_industries":578,"view_count":566,"like_count":185,"collection_count":317,"content":596,"can_edit":280},"2021-02-01T16:39:33.760Z","2026-05-23T21:33:52.426Z",3,{"id":294,"type":5,"owner_id":294,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},[569,570,571],{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":294},{"contributor_id":381},[573],{"article_id":51,"location_id":574,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"location":575},"633679",{"id":574,"type":307,"name":576,"color":6,"parent_location_id":577,"created_at":249,"updated_at":6},"Turku","FIN",[579,581,586,591],{"article_id":51,"industry_id":312,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"industry":580},{"id":312,"name":314,"description":315,"sector":316},{"article_id":51,"industry_id":582,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"industry":583},"education_and_government_services",{"id":582,"name":584,"description":585,"sector":316},"Education and Government Services","Providing public and private education and support services at any level or for any profession, and governmental and public administration services, including judicial, regulatory, and legislative activities, taxation, defence, public order and safety, immigration services, foreign affairs and the administration of government programmes",{"article_id":51,"industry_id":587,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"industry":588},"energy_utilities_and_independent_power_producers",{"id":587,"name":589,"description":590,"sector":316},"Energy Utilities and Independent Power Producers","Providing electricity and gas services, including traditional and renewable energy generation, natural and manufactured gas and operating gas networks",{"article_id":51,"industry_id":592,"created_at":305,"updated_at":6,"industry":593},"water_and_sewage",{"id":592,"name":594,"description":595,"sector":316},"Water and Sewage","Providing water and sewage services, including water collection and distribution, water treatment systems and sewage treatment facilities",{"id":597,"score":185,"body":598,"status":279,"article_id":51,"created_at":564,"updated_at":604,"published_at":564},"MN8C",{"title":599,"summary":600,"attachment":601},"Circular Turku project","\u003Cp>Turku is committed to becoming carbon neutral by 2029 and is using circular economy principles to address GHG emissions in a systemic manner. The Circular Turku project showcases how circularity supports climate action in practice with priority areas in food, water, construction, energy, transport and logistics. This collaboration with \u003Cstrong>﻿\u003C/strong>ICLEI&nbsp;ensures the actions identified as part of the roadmap are inclusive, build on community initiatives and create opportunities for all residents. This will offer tangible learnings for other local governments globally and replicable guidelines to incorporate social equity into circular economy planning.\u003C/p>",[602],{"name":603,"type":276,"value":603},"https://www.iclei.org/en/Circular_Turku.html","2022-06-09T12:59:49.850Z",{"id":69,"type":367,"cta":6,"cta_link":6,"created_at":606,"updated_at":607,"owner_id":532,"owner_relationship":197,"views":566,"owner":608,"image":609,"contributors":613,"article_locations":620,"article_industries":624,"view_count":566,"like_count":185,"collection_count":317,"content":633,"can_edit":280},"2021-01-21T22:08:27.365Z","2026-05-27T18:57:17.903Z",{"id":532,"type":5,"owner_id":532,"about":6,"job_title":6,"url":6,"linkedin":6,"email":6,"staff_of_id":6,"organisation_id":6,"organisation":6},{"id":610,"link":611,"alt":6,"source":6,"created_at":606,"updated_at":612,"article_id":69,"image_profile_id":6,"banner_profile_id":6},"8MUJvYwooOU=","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1778155340355-k-mio7gZ.jpeg","2022-06-06T13:07:19.819Z",[614,616,617,618,619],{"contributor_id":615},"0P8WPw",{"contributor_id":4},{"contributor_id":532},{"contributor_id":497},{"contributor_id":536},[621],{"article_id":69,"location_id":208,"created_at":622,"updated_at":6,"location":623},"2026-05-07T12:00:42.947Z",{"id":208,"type":211,"name":212,"color":6,"parent_location_id":213,"created_at":214,"updated_at":6},[625,631],{"article_id":69,"industry_id":626,"created_at":622,"updated_at":6,"industry":627},"logistics_services",{"id":626,"name":628,"description":629,"sector":630},"Logistics Services","Providing air, water, rail, and land transportation and related services for the distribution of goods, such as air freight, air courier and logistics services, maritime freight, marine courier and logistics services, rail freight, rail courier and logistics services, land freight, land courier and logistics services, including package and mail delivery and customs agents, as well as storage and warehouse facilities","transportation_and_logistics",{"article_id":69,"industry_id":350,"created_at":622,"updated_at":6,"industry":632},{"id":350,"name":352,"description":353,"sector":354},{"id":634,"score":185,"body":635,"status":279,"article_id":69,"created_at":606,"updated_at":612,"published_at":606},"pSaQ",{"title":636,"outcome":637,"problem":638,"summary":639,"solution":640,"attachment":641},"ColdHubs: Solar-powered, cooling-as-a-service solution","\u003Cp>The cooling storage rooms with solar energy are fully sustainable and reliable since they are using clean energy to keep food fresh and healthy for consumption. In 2019, the 24 operational ColdHubs saved 20,400 tons of food from spoilage for more than 3,000 farmers, increased the household income of these customers by 50% by eliminating food loss, created 48 new jobs for women, and saved 462 tons of CO2 emissions.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>In developing countries, once the fresh fruits and vegetables are harvested and collected, 45% of food spoils mainly due to lack of cold storage. This, in turn, leads to 470 million small farmers losing 25% of their annual income as well as a loss for consumers and an increase in waste. Cooling fresh produce could significantly slow down the rate of deterioration, thereby increasing the storage life of the goods.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>ColdHubs is a post-harvest, solar-powered, cooling-as-service solution in Nigeria. By offering a solution to store and preserve perishable foods that adequately meets the financing needs of smallholder farmers, ColdHubs is an effective solution to the issue of post- harvest losses in fruits, vegetables and other perishable food in Sub-Saharan Africa.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>ColdHubs are installed in major food production and consumption centers (in markets and farms). There, farmers place their produce in clean plastic crates, which are stacked inside the cold room. This extends the freshness of fruits, vegetables and other perishable food from 2 days to about 21 days. [1]\u003C/p>\u003Cp>\u003Cbr>\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Coldhubs offers farmers a flexible pay-as-you-store subscription model at rates that they can afford, helping to tackle the barrier of access to financing for cold chain solutions and bridges the technological gap for smallholder farmers.\u003C/p>","\u003Cp>Coldhubs Limited in Nigeria has developed a solution to address this problem. They increase the shelf lives of fruits and vegetables from 2 to more than 20 days with a 100% solar-powered walk-in cold room. They can beat the epileptic power supply as well as the high level of post-harvest losses witnessed by local farmers. At food production and consumption centers such as markets and farms, farmers can place their goods into these rooms with solar panels and use the company’s pay-as-you-store system. Next to reducing food waste, increasing healthy food supply, and helping local farmers, the company is planning to be fully self-sustainable and places importance on various sustainable targets, such as creating job opportunities for women.&nbsp;\u003C/p>",[642,644,646],{"name":643,"type":276,"value":643},"http://www.coldhubs.com/",{"name":645,"type":276,"value":645},"https://coolcoalition.org/meet-the-global-caas-prize-winner-coldhubs/",{"name":647,"type":276,"value":647},"https://www.linkedin.com/posts/circle-economy_introducing-coldhubs-limited-one-of-the-activity-6760886070910472193-I46E",[]]