1. What is the Kenya Plastics Pact?

A trailblazing, collaborative platform.

The Kenya Plastic Pact will be a trailblazing, collaborative platform that will bring together companies, government entities, NGOs, researchers,  and other stakeholders to work collectively towards a common vision of a circular economy  for plastics, as outlined by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s New Plastics Economy.

 

Elimination, innovation and circulation.

This vision aims to ensure that plastics never become waste by eliminating plastics we don’t need, innovating to ensure that the plastics we do need are reusable, recyclable or compostable and circulating the plastics we use to keep them in the economy and out of the environment. Within our platform, we will bind all stakeholders to embrace this common vision and we will stimulate industry led innovation, dialogue and collaboration to create new business models, generate job opportunities, and unlock barriers to move towards the circular economy for plastic, with improved economic, environmental and societal outcomes overall. By bringing together all stakeholders and driving collaborative action, the Kenya Plastics Pact will deliver a step change towards a circular economy, enabling companies and governments in Kenya to collectively meet impactful goals that they could not meet on their own and create transparency by publishing their progress every year.

Partners behind the scenes: The development of the Kenya Plastics Pact will be led by Sustainable Inclusive Business, the knowledge center under the Kenya Private Sector Alliance (KEPSA); with support from WRAP – the UK based global environmental NGO, MAVA and the Ellen MacArthur Foundation (EMF).

Targets are our building blocks: Based on the New Plastics Economy vision, the Kenya Plastics Pact will work towards an ambitious set of joint 2030 targets adapted to the local context to create a circular economy for plastics in Kenya. The targets will be revealed in the formal launch of the Kenya Plastics Pact later in 2021.

The Kenya Plastics Pact will be part of a global network and the second Plastics Pact in Africa, after the South African Plastics Pact. KPP joins the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s global Plastics Pact Network, a unique platform to exchange learnings and best practices with Plastics Pacts in other countries and regions to accelerate the transition to a circular economy for plastic globally. Plastics Pacts include Canada, Chile, France, Netherlands, Poland, South Africa, UK, USA, Europe and Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Island Nations (ANZPAC).

The Kenya Plastics Pact will be Kenyan. Thus, while benefiting from innovations at the global level, the Kenya Plastics Pact will have the autonomy to tailor make solutions that work specifically for our national context.

2. How will the Kenya Plastics Pact differ from other national/ Kenya plastics initiatives?

The Kenya Plastics Pact will be focused on driving a circular economy for plastic with a holistic strategy, including targets on elimination, design for recyclability, reuse, recycling and inclusion of recycled content. We recognise there are ongoing plastics initiatives in the public and private sector including the development of the Kenya Extended Producer Responsible Organisation (KEPRO) and the Kenya Plastic Action Plan who are connected to one of these specific targets and therefore are complementary to the actions of the Pact. We also recognise the projects, campaigns and work being done by some leading businesses and organisations. However, we need to involve and energise more Kenyan businesses and organisations to take action in the different stages of the value chain to change the plastics system. i.e. without an increased demand for recycled plastic, the infrastructure will not be enough to increase recycling rates and vice versa; which is what the Pact aims to do.

The Pact will work together with and help accelerate existing government programs, initiatives and policies; supporting the Kenyan recycling sector by delivering jobs, skills and investment opportunities. The Pact will also be complementary by having a strong focus on upstream innovation: solutions to tackle the problem at it source.

 

We cheer for the initiatives with a specific focus, believing that collectively they will contribute to the delivering of the set Kenya Plastics Pact targets. Here you can exchange, be in contact and work together with very different players from innovation, research, incubation, redesign, collection and recycling sectors. The Pact is a dynamic platform where all efforts are brought together and success stories are amplified.

 

The Kenya Plastics Pact will create a convening facilitating mechanism that drives industry wide collaboration and alignment. Being part of a country wide coordinated platform where our voice is unified will speed up the transition, and our global voice will amplify the milestones and success stories.

3. Who can join the Kenya Plastics Pact?

The Kenya Plastics Pact welcomes enquiries from the whole value chain of businesses, organisations and institutions who can help support and deliver the targets, namely :

  • Retailers, brands, food service and hospitality businesses who sell or provide products packed in plastic packaging.
  • Plastic packaging convertors/producers.
  • Plastic resin suppliers.
  • Waste management businesses and plastics recyclers .
  • Organisations involved in waste plastic collection and sorting.
  • Technical / innovation providers .
  • Organisations who can help support the targets e.g. trade associations, community or city authorities, academic institutions etc

4. What will be the benefits of being a member?

The time for change is now. In recent years, the failings of today’s linear take-make-waste plastics system have become more visible, and a major topic on the public and regulatory agenda. As a result, the vision of a circular economy for plastic, where plastics never become waste or pollution, has generated significant global momentum. To date, we have seen plenty of examples of efforts and actions by individual organisations that helped make steps in the right direction. However, we must now make big leaps, which are only possible if everyone works together in a concerted manner. In Kenya, we also have the benefit of being able to bypass some hurdles of the West. We can set the example; and be a leader in the region and on the African continent.

The Kenya Plastics Pact will enable these big leaps by having all relevant organisations in the country work towards a common vision for a circular economy for plastic.

 

The Kenya Plastics Pact will bring together all key players in the country behind a clear strategy to drive solutions, with tailored action, feedback, measurement of progress, and analysis to tackle the key challenges in Kenya. By joining, you will also have the opportunity to help shape the national strategy of the Pact and participate in the various workstreams.

 

 

Why should I be part of the Kenya Plastics Pact?

The tangible benefits of becoming a member (founding or non-founding member) of the Kenya Plastics Pact include:

  • Demonstrating dynamic industry leadership beyond the ‘closed’ initiatives with limited extended exposure.
  • Recognition from media and the government for being an activator towards collaborative action and making progress towards targets.
  • Early access to research and innovation; peer group insights and collaborative projects.
  • Support to make progress towards targets, e.g. through indicator benchmarking and technical advice on best practice.
  • Align action with current business goals and investments.
  • Support in communications to suppliers and citizens.
  • For local companies, the Kenya Plastics Pact brings economies of scale to drive solutions.
  • The Plastics Pact is a local delivery mechanism for global targets and national strategies, aligned with the vision and targets of the New Plastics Economy Global Commitment.
  • As part of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s Plastics Pact Network, the Kenya Plastics Pact will get access to the Foundation’s network of leading global businesses, as well as insights and analysis.

Kenya Plastics Pact will benefit from ability to exchange learnings with other Plastics Pacts, and demonstrate leadership globally, through membership of the global Plastics Pact network

5. What will my money be used for if I sign up today?

Fees will be distributed to fund part of the activities and the secretariat. For the first year; the launch and kick off activities and the design of the Roadmap is funded by MAVA.

What are the members’ responsibilities?

  • Active support and being an ambassador towards/for the collective vision and the targets of the Kenya Plastics Pact.
  • Take part, share, meet and communicate actively to ensure all actions are notified, aligned and boosted.
  • Support with an annual membership fee[1]. The size of the fee depends on the size of the company:
  • Report annual progress.

6. What will be the reporting system and how will the information of our annual report be used?

Transparent reporting will be a key outcome of the Kenya Plastics Pact. The KPP will then publish a public annual progress report of the progress made toward the group targets. Your company or organization will be responsible for reporting results annually through the Pact’s monitoring system. The results will be combined into a transparent report that will be made available annually and also shared with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s annual Plastics Pact Network progress reporting team. It is important to note that individual results will not be singled out in reporting for failing to meet targets or commitments; instead, progress will be publicly reported collectively for the Kenya Plastics Pact. For privacy purposes, confidential and/or individual company data will not be shared publicly.

7. How will the Pact be funded?

The Kenya Plastics Pact core funding will be from a combination of annual business contributions and additional external funding for projects and campaigns from innovation funds, trusts and foundations, and other sources.

The development and initial stage of the Kenya Plastics Pact has been supported by the Swiss MAVA Foundation, and UK Government.

The annual contributions will be set ahead of the launch.
In addition to financial support, participating businesses will be asked to provide active participation and ‘in-kind’ support to projects and initiatives that align with business priorities.

8. How will the Kenya Plastics Pact facilitate local collaboration?

The Kenya Plastics Pact will be a voluntary public commitment between all stakeholders in the local plastics value chain. The Kenya Plastics Pact is complementary to and aims to mutually reinforce the current projects running in the plastics space (PROs, Waste Management Plans, etc). Additionally, the Kenya Plastics Pact aims to complement, not replace any existing or potential legislation.

9. What is the Plastics Pact network?

The Kenya Plastics Pact will be part of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s Plastics Pact network, a global network of 10 national and regional Pacts aligned behind a common vision and set of ambitious targets.

The global Plastics Pact network has been expanding since the launch of The UK Plastics Pact in 2018 and is now focused in the delivery of the set targets. All Pact leads meet once a month to exchange experiences and support eachother in tackling common challenges. The Kenya Plastics Pact is joining a unique platform to exchange learnings and best practices across countries and regions to accelerate the transition to the circular economy for plastics.

10. How does being part of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s Plastics Pact network benefit the Kenya Plastics Pact?

The Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s New Plastics Economy initiative works with more than 1,000 organisations across the plastic packaging value chain to change global flows of plastic packaging material by 2025, and set the world on an irreversible path towards a circular economy for plastics, in which it never becomes waste or pollution.

 

The Foundation’s Plastics Pact Network connects national and regional initiatives around the world to implement solutions towards a circular economy for plastic. Each Plastics Pact is led by a local lead organisation and brings together businesses, governments, NGOs and others in a specific nation or region behind a set of 2025 plastics circular economy targets, with annual public reporting on progress.

 

The Kenya Plastics Pact is the second of such national initiatives in Africa, after the South African Plastics Pact. The Kenya Plastics Pact’s targets align the common vision, shared by all national and regional initiatives in the global Plastics Pacts Network, as well as over 500 organisations that have signed the New Plastics Economy Global Commitment. Many multinational businesses who support the New Plastics Economy have indicated their intention to sign up to the Kenya Plastics Pact. This alignment of global and national action behind a shared vision is crucial to change an entire global plastics system where current value chains do not stop at country borders.

11. How has the Plastics Pact approach been successful in the UK and what impact has the UK Plastics Pact had?

The UK Plastics Pact has been running for over 3 years and has already shown significant positive results.

  • 400 million problematic and unnecessary single use plastic items eliminated by the end of 2020.
  • Pact members are over halfway towards all their packaging being recyclable, and the UK is over half-way towards recycling 70% of plastic packaging.
  • Members are a third of the way towards an average of 30% recycled content in their plastic packaging.
  • There has been a huge boost of investment in UK recycling, enabling an extra 240,000 tonnes of recycling.

12. How will the Kenya Plastic Pact work with and integrate the informal waste sector?

The informal waste sector will be represented in the Kenya Plastics Pact through their non-governmental organisations that will join as Supporters, and also be represented on the Steering Committee. Their input will help shape the projects and guidance developed by the Kenya Plastics Pact. The informal waste sector ‘knows’ how things work ‘on the ground’!

Waste pickers integration is the creation of a formally planned recycling system that values and improves the present role of waste pickers, builds on the strengths of their informal system to collect and revalue materials, and includes waste pickers as key partners in its design, implementation, evaluation and revision. Waste pickers integration includes the integration of waste pickers’ work as well as the political, economic, social, legal and environmental integration of waste pickers.

The Kenya Plastics Pact will explore and co-create a program of activities to support the waste pickers in such areas as accreditation, credits, data platforms, training, welfare, etc; to increase the circularity of plastics. The Kenya Plastics Pact will collaborate with other Pacts that rely on the informal waste sector to champion and support pioneering initiatives and best practices. Ultimately, achieving the ambitious targets of the Kenya Plastics Pact will expand the number of jobs in Kenya and improve the economic conditions for Kenya’s waste pickers.

13. How will the Kenya Plastics Pact differ from other national/Kenya plastics initiatives ?

The Kenya Plastics Pact will be focused on driving a circular economy for plastic with a holistic strategy, including targets on elimination, design for recyclability, reuse, recycling and inclusion of recycled content. We recognise there are ongoing plastics initiatives in the public and private sector including the development of the Kenya Extended Producer Responsible Organisation (KEPRO) and the Kenya Plastic Action Plan who are connected to one of these specific targets and therefore are complementary to the actions of the Pact. We also recognise the projects, campaigns and work being done by some leading businesses and organisations. However, we need to involve and energise more Kenyan businesses and organisations to take action in the different stages of the value chain to change the plastics system. i.e. without an increased demand for recycled plastic, the infrastructure will not be enough to increase recycling rates and vice versa; which is what the Pact aims to do.

The Pact will work together with and help accelerate existing government programs, initiatives and policies; by and large supporting the Kenyan recycling sector by delivering jobs, skills and investment opportunities. The Pact will also be complementary by having a strong focus on upstream innovation: solutions to tackle the problem at it source.

We cheer for the initiatives with a specific focus, believing that collectively they will contribute to the delivering of the set Kenya Plastics Pact targets. Here you can exchange, be in contact and work together with very different players from innovation, research, incubation, redesign, collection and recycling sectors. The Pact is a dynamic platform where all efforts are brought together and success stories are amplified.

The Kenya Plastics Pact will create a convening facilitating mechanism that drives industry wide collaboration and alignment. Being part of a country wide coordinated platform where our voice is unified will speed up the transition, and our global voice will amplify the milestones and success stories.