Youth are fighting climate change and food waste while creating jobs.
Martin Komu is an early riser. “I’m usually up around 4 a.m., and I’m here by around 5,” he says, standing at his market stall, where he sells vegetables. “This is where I sell my wares.”
Today he has carrots, onions, and green bell peppers, known as capsicum here in the Korogocho Market in Nairobi, Kenya. “These are third-grade capsicum,” he says. The highest-grade peppers are sold at a higher-end supermarket, but he can still sell these at a decent price.
Same with the carrots , which may not look perfect. “A deformed carrot is not a bad carrot, and by selling them at an affordable price, I am also avoiding food losses.”
Komu’s vegetable stall is a link in a chain of businesses in Kenya that are reinventing the way food is produced and sold, to take advantage of more climate-friendly and equitable ways of bringing food to urban areas. People here are coming up with ways to reduce food waste, or use it to create new products and opportunities for young people.
It’s part of what’s called an Urban Food Hive, which in Kenya is centered around Nairobi, an area with a rapidly growing population. Urban sprawl is invading arable farming zones, and an inefficient market is leading to wasted harvests, and food waste clogging landfills and contributing to greenhouse gas emissions driving climate change. In Nairobi, Oxfam and partners are supporting women- and youth-led green businesses that grow, transport, process, and sell food in ways that reduce waste and create opportunities.
Food waste alternatives
In the Korogocho Market, a group of young people are making soap from discarded potatoes, and oil from overripe (but not quite yet rotten) pressed avocadoes – a low cholesterol alternative for cooking. By partly burning discarded banana leaves to create a charcoal, and combining them with avocado waste as a binder and compressing, they create a low-smoke briquette for fuel people can use for cooking at home and in schools. Others gather different forms of food waste from the market, mainly fruits and vegetables, and use different techniques such as combining with worms to produce very rich organic compost. They then sell this to the farmers that supply the market.
While learning to make these products, youth are also being trained by Oxfam’s partners in collaboration with the Nairobi County Government authorities in business planning and other entrepreneurial skills. They are also learning how to make their needs clear in decision-making spaces where policies are developed – essential skills for advocating for more and better government support for their business and environmental goals.
The Urban Food Hive initiative, which Oxfam has undertaken with Second Muse, is now also established in Nigeria, Uganda, the Philippines, and Colombia. Its goal is to help improve access to affordable, nutritious food in urban areas, create opportunities for new businesses run by women and young people, and generally improve food security for the most impoverished people in urban areas. The Urban Food Hive initiative is now reaching thousands of people in these five countries.
There’s a river near Korogocho that has been clogged with garbage. Martin Komu says he is happy to eliminate wasted vegetables that might otherwise end up there. “When I take something that was supposed to go in the river or a dump site, and I use it to make these products or compost, it’s very fulfilling.”