By Chebet Caroline
For many people, the thought of making a decent
living out of trash at a dumping site is hard to imagine. Yet one Nakuru
woman has beaten many odds at the Gioto dumping site to turn trash into
a booming business.
Rachel Mburu has for more than 25 years been
getting her hands dirty in the dumping site in order to take her six
children to school and put food on the table.
The 41-year-old widow has not only seen her
children through good schools but has employed other people. Ms Mburu’s
plastic business that has expanded over the years started as a small
venture run by her husband.
“The business started small, from buying plastics
from the street families who lived in the dumping site. With time it
grew into a family business,” Ms Mburu says.
Her business premises is situated a few metres away from Gioto, Nakuru’s main dumping site.
Currently Ms Mburu has bought compressing and
grinding machines, which she hopes will help ease the process of
recycling plastics.
The plastics undergo several process that include
sorting, compressing and finally being ground into particles before
being sold to plastic manufacturing companies.
The business woman sells more than 14 tonnes of plastic in a week to a China-based company.
The business woman sells more than 14 tonnes of plastic in a week to a China-based company.
The recycled plastics, she says, are used to manufacture plastic bottles and shoes, cups, plates and sportswear.
Although running plastic recycling business is
costly, Ms Mburu attributes her success to patience, an attribute she
has nurtured while running the business.
“Plastic prices keep changing with seasons and
sometimes one incurs great losses. But all the same we have to keep
going,” she says.
Currently, she has employed 26 workers, majority of them being women, to help run the business.
“When my husband passed on last year, I realised
how hard it could have been to get by were if not for this business and
that made me bring in more women from the nearest slums and those within
the dump site,” Ms Mburu says.
In efforts to advocate for the need for a clean
environment by recycling materials, Ms Mburu has been attending several
environmental meetings in the county.
She has also been urging county governments to
support women to startup businesses that do not require a lot of capital
so the women can have a source of income.
One of Ms Mburu’s workers, Eunice Obete, says she has learnt the importance of recycling waste materials.
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