Poor waste-management practices, low recycling rates and illegal dumping of
toxic materials from overseas shipping containers have plagued the continent of
Africa for many years. While these are complex problems that cannot be
solved overnight, one man is on a mission to raise greater awareness of the
issues while driving positive change on the ground.
Ray Onovwigun, a 30-year-old, London-born entrepreneur of Nigerian
descent, runs Romco Metals — a multinational
non-ferrous metal recycler with an emerging market focus. The company produces
recycled metal ingots for manufacturers, and currently has two plants operating
in Nigeria and Ghana. Romco has grown at an impressive rate since Onovwigun
founded the business in 2015; it now ships its products all over the world.
“Only 1 percent of the world’s recycled metal comes from the African continent,
despite having one-fifth of the world’s population,” Onovwigun told
Sustainable Brands™ in a recent interview. “There’s a gap in
sustainability at the moment in Africa. We want to grow and fill that gap.”
By recycling valuable metals such as
aluminum
and copper, including those that have been dumped in African landfills,
Onovwigun believes he can serve growing demand from manufacturers for such
materials while reducing the need for mining of virgin raw materials within the
continent.
“The emerging markets are the places that are the most exploited in terms of
irresponsible mining. The West and others take advantage of this, despite
sustainable principles and high waste-diversion rates at home,” he says. “It
becomes clear that until we increase recycling
rates,
the problems caused by mining, the destruction of our ecosystems and the effects
these have on global climate change won’t get any better.”
As well as helping to alleviate some of these pressures, recycled metals come
with significant decarbonisation benefits. According to Onovwigun, the recycling
of aluminum alone uses 95 percent less energy than virgin mining and emits 92
percent less CO2.
“There is a massive shift now towards decarbonisation, right through the
manufacturing supply
chain,”
he says. “End consumers are also becoming more aware as to what products they
are using and want to ensure these products are being made in a sustainable
way.”
Romco produces recycled aluminum alloys, which are used in all sorts of products
including food and beverage containers, automotive parts and medical equipment.
Last year, the company diversified into recycling copper and now has plans to
expand into other base metals such as lead, zinc and steel.
On a wider level, Romco is also helping to address a key challenge Africa faces
in dealing with its waste — a lack of infrastructure. “Infrastructure is a big
problem,” Onovwigun says. “There’s also no [landfill] diversion, so it’s about
building these networks to help create that — these networks are also part of
the infrastructure build that is lacking in the continent.”
By not only building recycling facilities but setting up trade hubs to increase
operational efficiencies and embarking on educational outreach programmes, Romco
hopes it can play its part in helping to close that infrastructure gap. So far,
the company has been successful in raising £10million (GBP) in private finance
to help with capital investment, and has now started working in Burkina Faso
to build a permanent presence for feedstock sourcing.
“We are trying to integrate our operations so Africa starts to do more business
with Africa,” Onovwigun says. “This waste problem is very informal at the moment
in Africa, but it is becoming more formal as time goes on. We are just trying to
be inclusive and help create the solutions to deal with it.”
Very much a hands-on CEO, Onovwigun feels he has the experience and
level-headedness needed to successfully steer his business forward in Africa,
where others may have failed.
“Where a lot of multinationals may have come and gone in the past is not
understanding the landscape in which they are operating in. Having that
on-in-the-ground approach has really helped me in this journey,” he says. “We
started from nothing. We started on a small piece of land by my Auntie’s petrol
station in Lagos — with a baler from the UK that we used to crush and
sort the materials — and we grew it organically from there.”
To date, Romco has recycled more than 21,700 tonnes of aluminum and over 1,000
tonnes of copper. In comparison to virgin ore mining, that represents nearly
67,500 metric tonnes of CO2 savings and almost 138,350 cubic meters of landfill
sorted.
Going forward, Onovwigun says his plan is to have seven recycling plants
operating across three continents within the next five years: “If we achieve
this, we should save over 338,000 tonnes of carbon each year. These are huge
savings that we are looking to bring by developing these plants.”
Onovwigun is also shaping Romco to become a scalable model that can be easily
replicated in other developing economies such as Tanzania and Gabon — as
ultimately, he believes places such as these is where the battle against
over-mining and waste will be won.
“The fight is where the biggest sustainability gaps are — and they’re in the emerging markets,” he says.
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Maxine Perella is an environmental journalist working in the field of corporate sustainability, circular economy and resource risk.
Published Sep 10, 2021 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST