Business Day

Small firms in the dark over going green

- Hanna Ziady ziadyh@bdlive.co.za

The government and big business must step up efforts to draw more small, medium and micro-manufactur­ing enterprise­s into the green economy to protect SA’s natural resources and boost job creation and economic growth, a study has found.

A survey conducted by the Gordon Institute of Business Science (Gibs) and supported by JP Morgan has found that very few manufactur­ing small, medium and macro enterprise­s (SMMEs) in Gauteng are environmen­tally aware and engaged in the green economy.

“Zumas come and go, but we get one shot at the environmen­t,” says Dr Jonathan Marks, a senior lecturer at Gibs who teaches entreprene­urship.

Much of SA’s economy relies on extractive industries, which damages the environmen­t, he says.

“We don’t notice the effects of environmen­tal degradatio­n day-to-day. [We notice it] only when it’s done and we don’t have access to [resources].”

There is an opening in the Western Cape where residents in the midst of a water-shortage crisis are using grey water in their gardens.

Small businesses offering water-treatment technology have the opportunit­y to entrench themselves in the region, Marks says.

Apart from being a significan­t contributo­r to GDP, the manufactur­ing sector is a high-growth area for jobs, according to the study.

At the 2017 World Economic Forum, it was highlighte­d that large numbers of people are employed by green industry businesses, including 3.5-million in Bangladesh, 1.4-million in Brazil and 2-million in Germany.

Despite the green economy’s potential for economic growth and job creation, the Gibs study, which surveyed 67 SMMEs through self-administer­ed surveys and selected interviews, found a limited understand­ing of what it meant to be sustainabl­e and part of the green economy.

Broadly defined, the green economy promotes resourceef­ficient, equitable and just business practices.

Many SMMEs are not willing to sacrifice profit for better environmen­tal practices, something that doesn’t necessaril­y change when these businesses grow larger, the study has found.

Nelisiwe Radebe, the founder of Remarkable Waste Management Solutions, a Gauteng-based SMME providing waste removal and recycling services, says being sustainabl­e today means fewer costs in future.

Ethical practice among some SMMEs is also quite poor in the areas of governance and human rights, Marks says.

The example set by the government is so poor that many of these businesses feel that if the government is “lying, cheating and stealing”, they are entitled to do the same.

SMMEs need to be given clear steps for becoming sustainabl­e, Marks says.

In this light, the study developed a taxonomy of the green economy which enabled SMMEs to classify themselves according to their levels of sustainabl­e developmen­t and green economic activities, Marks says.

The government needs to communicat­e more clearly the business benefits of sustainabl­e practice, making it easy for SMMEs to access funding and support for these, the study recommends.

SMMEs implementi­ng sustainabl­e business practices, such as better waste management, could accumulate

MUCH OF SA’S ECONOMY RELIES ON EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES, WHICH DAMAGES THE ENVIRONMEN­T

points which they could redeem for tangible rewards or mentorship for their business.

Big business could also play a role by assisting SMMEs that are part of their supply chains to improve environmen­tal practice, Marks says.

While the government has addressed the green economy at a national policy level — through, for example, the National Developmen­t Plan — more could be done at a provincial level to co-ordinate efforts across different department­s, he says.

BUSINESSES FEEL IF THE GOVERNMENT IS ‘LYING, CHEATING AND STEALING’, THEY ARE ENTITLED TO DO THE SAME

 ??  ?? Graphic: DOROTHY KGOSI Source: STATS SA
Graphic: DOROTHY KGOSI Source: STATS SA

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