Source: United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
Nairobi, 9 September 2015 - As the world gears up to adopt the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) later this month, 27 trailblazing eco-enterprises are recognized at the 2015 SEED Africa Symposium in Nairobi for employing business models that bring social and environmental benefits to local communities, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) announced today.
The SEED Awards recognize innovative social and environmental start-up enterprises whose businesses help to meet sustainable development challenges. By helping them to scale-up their activities SEED aims to boost local economies and tackle poverty, while promoting the sustainable use of resources and ecosystems.
The 2015 SEED Awards have a special focus on Africa, with 25 Awards given to enterprises in Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda. A further 2 SEED Gender Equality Awards go to women-led enterprises that promote gender equality and women’s empowerment as their core objectives.
In addition to a financial contribution, every SEED Award Winner will receive technical assistance, free access to different supporting institutions, and tailor-made support to develop their business and skills. They will also join a network of more than 200 enterprises that have received the award so far.
From distributing solar energy solutions through women-led networks in Namibia to using mobile phones for remote eye diagnosis in Southern Africa, to building houses from bricks made of waste plastic – this year’s awardees have demonstrated how renewable energy and new technologies can drive community-led sustainable development.
The 2015 call for applications saw contributions from 55 countries, representing the collaborative efforts of partnerships between enterprises, non-governmental organisations, women’s and youth groups, labour organizations, public authorities, international agencies, and academia. Most of the applications were in agricultural and rural development, energy and climate change, and ecosystem management. Many entries at the same time involved IT applications, and education and training.
To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the awards, and the 202 inspirational enterprises who have received it over the past decade, a special recognition was presented to one of the previous winners. Chosen in an online vote by more than 5,500 people, Tambul Leaf Plates from India was honoured for producing and marketing biodegradable disposable dinnerware from the fallen sheath of the arecanut plant, reducing plastic waste pollution and creating a value chain on the basis on an abundant natural resource.
Honouring this decade of partnerships, learning and growing in social and environmental entrepreneurship, SEED published its 10 Year Flagship Report titled “Turning Ideas into Impact: Setting the Stage for the next 10 Years of Green and Inclusive Growth through Entrepreneurship” at the SEED Africa Symposium. It tells SEED’s story, explains its multi-level areas of intervention and theory of change, and highlights the key lessons SEED wants to share from its experience.
The International Awards Ceremony is a highlight of the SEED Africa Symposium 2015, which is bringing together around 500 entrepreneurs and business people, policymakers, and representatives from civil society and support institutions from across Africa and beyond, around the theme “Building Bridges for Impact: Green and Inclusive Growth through Entrepreneurship”.
http://gbpp.org/en/2015/09/6650

