Vuk'uzenzele

Duo turns trash into treasure

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SIYABUDDY is addressing social issues such as unemployme­nt and environmen­tal pollution, while giving locals dignity that comes with having a job.

Siyabonga Tshabalala and Nomuntu Ndhlovu took the decision to leave their corporate jobs in Gauteng and go back home to their rural village of Steenbok, in Mpumalanga, to start a business.

Both aged 27, the pair now run SiyaBuddy, a recycling and waste management company that has created 18 direct jobs and 541 indirect jobs in their community, which falls within the Nkomazi Local Municipali­ty.

Armed with just a business plan, the two young entreprene­urs applied to the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IDC) for a loan to purchase machinery to get their business off the ground.

“Our applicatio­n was successful and we used the loan to buy the machinery we needed to get started,” said Tshabalala, who is the Co-founder and operations director at SiyaBuddy.

The company collects waste from its closest malls and other public waste dispensing places and processes it. The processed waste is sold to manufactur­ers according to their specificat­ions. The 541 indirect employees are residents who collect additional waste on behalf of SiyaBuddy, at a fee.

The R4.6 million loan from the IDC was used to purchase two baling machines, a forklift, three scales, a truck and office furniture for the startup company. The business provides a source of income for 541 local people, who work as independen­t waste collectors. “The business is growing and we are happy, especially because we have started to break even,” Tshabalala said.

To ensure real empowermen­t of their employees, the two young business partners took a decision to establish a workers’ trust for their staff and shared a 25 percent stake with their employees.

After the implementa­tion of the workers’ empowermen­t initiative, the IDC provided a further R4.5 million grant to the business in order to support the empowermen­t initiative.

“We are going to use the grant to increase our production capacity and ease our transporta­tion constraint­s by getting a bigger truck for waste transporta­tion,” said co-founder Ndhlovu, who is also the company’s business developmen­t director.

 ??  ?? SiyaBuddy founders Nomuntu Ndhlovu and Siyabonga Tshabalala discovered a niche market in waste management.
SiyaBuddy founders Nomuntu Ndhlovu and Siyabonga Tshabalala discovered a niche market in waste management.

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