Submitted
Financial Inclusion Challenge

PETCOIN

Team Leader
Sebastian Appram
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
AnC Waste Management Services
What is the name of your solution?
PETCOIN
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
Our solution will help plastic collectors receive and save with blockchain tokens (Petcoin) in exchange for plastics in Ghana.
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?

Ghana generates over a million tons of plastic waste each year and only between 2% and 5% of this waste gets properly recycled. Many places within the country lacks the infrastructure to safely dispose off plastics. The severity of the problem is indicated by the fact that Ghana ranks as one of the top 10 most populated countries in the world. Over 2.58 million metric tons of raw plastics is imported into Ghana each year and 73% ends up as waste. With only up to 5% recycled, the rest accumulates in the environment or ends up in landfills and nearly 30% ends up in the ocean. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) estimates plastic bottles that end up in the ocean can take up to 450 years to biodegrade. 

A total of 8 million tons of plastic waste leaks into the ocean each year. By 2050 there will be more plastic than fish in the ocean if we do not take urgent, collective action.

The plastic waste that ends up in the landfills contributes to the contamination of groundwater and air pollution. In addition, undisposed plastics can amass in the drains and lead to flooding. The stagnant water from pollution-induced flooding facilitates the outbreak of water borne diseases like malaria and cholera among vulnerable people living in highly polluted areas, Ghanaians also resort to burning their undisposed plastic waste which airborne toxins.

However, plastic collection is a means of survival for poor, urban communities across Ghana. In Ghana, plastic collectors recover at least 218 tons daily or nearly 12% of the total plastics generated. But pickers, mostly women and the youth, have little visibility into the market price for what they have collected which leaves them vulnerable to the exploitation of middlemen. There are over 2,000 waste pickers in Ghana, working harder to restore sanity to the environment. The system of waste pickers operates “below the radar” without formalized standards and processes. This puts stakeholders throughout the value chain at risk and also limits the way in which larger institutions can engage. Financial inclusion is associated with a decrease in the likelihood of using burning, public dumping and indiscriminate dumping as means of solid waste disposal relative to the collection method. Thus, financial inclusion helps households to adopt a healthier or proper form of waste disposal. The outcome of the effect of financial inclusion in the waste management industry is not farfetched because, studies have revealed financial inclusion to enhance poverty alleviation, economic growth and net wealth benefits.

What is your solution?

Our solution (PETCOIN) is a blockchain token in exchange for plastics retrieved by plastic collectors in Ghana. This provides an online platform or physical collection centers to exchange plastic waste with blockchain rewards. Individual plastic collectors will have a unique user account created for them as they trade their plastics. This also will ensure means of savings and access to loans with  tokens linked with their mobile money wallets hence easy access to withdrawals anytime and anywhere. Premium clients will have opportunity to access loans ranging between ($100-$500) payable with plastics within an agreed period of time. A premium client should be in the capacity to trade at least a ton of plastic waste per month and also meet credit-worthiness assessment by our team.

PETCOIN will be in USD ($) equivalence to the local currency (cedi) to ensure stability in value for money. These tokens when converted into monetary rewards will serve the needs of these collectors. Our system will allow anyone deliver plastic waste at certified collection centers nationwide where transactions could take place after taking the weights of their stock (plastic waste). For every kilogram of plastic will be valued per plastics type, thus HDPE, LDPE, PET, PP and others. 

The blockchain technology will ensure that tokens for plastics are securely awarded and used. The plastic waste is digitally registered at collection, allowing for transparent and traceable waste management system where everyone can see these plastics ends up. 

Our solution technology's role as an enabler to create and transfer assets means it can connect each item of plastic packaging with consumer so that it can be treated like an asset with clear monetary, social and ecological value. We have adopted and incorporated technologies such as digital watermark, RFID, NTFs, or IoT which will be used to trace products through the supply chain. A simple scan of the QR code will automatically link information to an app and generate a PETCOIN credit. By using the Petcoin app, anyone can open and fully access features like inventory tracking, on or offline transactions, multiple client accounts, secure blockchain wallets.

All plastics retrieved will be sold to recycling partners both domestic and overseas as plough back to sustain the business.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

In an era of post-Covid, it has become more urgent to integrate the informal waste pickers-mostly women, ensure their safety and acknowledge their contribution to the overall environmental quality of many urban and rural areas. In Ghana, informal waste pickers, numbering over 2,000 play an important role in the solid waste management system, acting as a parallel way to formal waste collection and disposal agents. Informal recycling activities by the informal waste pickers notably, contribute positively to the economy by reducing the costs of waste management systems and providing income opportunities for large numbers of poor people. The environmental and economic contributions of informal workers to local governments, local communities and the value chains in many ways are unrecognized. The creation of linkages between the informal sector, municipal and metropolitan departments and the formal sector sector is necessary to promote effective waste management in Ghana. Our solution seeks to strategize on means to regulate the informal sector in Ghana by connecting them to better pricing value for plastic waste and other opportunities like (loans) payable with plastics. This is going to be a maiden initiative in Ghana with respect to the informal waste industry. The outcome of this will give a better recognition of the important role waste pickers play in our economy, commiserating with improved economic conditions, enhanced poverty alleviation and net wealth benefits.

Our findings over the years, show that financial inclusion increases the likelihood of households opting for the collection (healthy) method of solid waste disposal relative to burning, public dumping and indiscriminate disposal of solid waste. 

On the other hand, our solution extends to salvaging marine habitats from ocean plastic pollution. Plastic pollution is a major environmental concern due to the severe threats its poses to both terestrial and marine ecosystems. The ocean health index for Ghana showed a consistent decline from 2017 to 2019 from a score of 63 to 59. Marine plastic pollution facts show it is ridding the marine species, with over 700 on the edge of extinction. Low recycling techniques coupled with lack of education on proper solid waste disposal by the populace in Ghana contribute significantly to marine pollution.

Further, a major channel via which financial inclusion enhances the choice of healthy solid waste disposal method is through income, and for that matter better incentive packages from PETCOIN.

How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

Our team's solution hinges on human centered design with inputs gathered over four (4) years from constant interactions with the various communities we work in basically Accra, Moree, Cape Coast, and Elmina. We believe a user's experience means more than just a product interface.It encompasses the whole experience a person will have with a brand and their overall satisfaction. Applying design thinking approach ensured that we discovered the problem, researched with users and their context through question framing, user stories and themes, personas and insight statements, involving how might we questions as well as developing design strategy statement. In our concepting and building, we generated ideas, screened to top five, bundled ideas and created our concept through scenarios and storyboards then rapid prototyping. Lastly, it was important testing with people, conducted usability test and recorded results, enhance , retest and refine design then a creating a pitch for our design. We spent a surprising amount of time not knowing the answer to the challenge at hand, yet we forge ahead. We empathize and iterate, we look for inspiration in unexpected places. Our major inspiration that solution is out there and that by keeping focused on the people we are designing for and asking the right questions, we will get there together. We believed that all problems are solvable and that people who face those problems everyday are the ones who hold the key to their answer.

Our team's mindset that set us apart are creative confidence, make it, learn from failure, empathy, embrace ambiguity, optimism and lastly iterate, iterate then iterate.

Various heads in the communities, opinion and traditional leaders and key stakeholders were engaged on the need to protect these coastal communities from plastic pollution hence incentivizing waste picking activities. Numerous sensitization and education on good waste management practices have been well participated by community members and this has promoted household waste segregation.

Our team is positioned to deliver in rolling out this PETCOIN initiative after extensive years of research and user-centric solution from our traditional line of business.

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Make it easier and more affordable for individuals and MSMEs to make investments and transfer payments, across geographies and across different types of platforms
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Cape Coast
In what country is your solution team headquartered?
  • Ghana
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Scale: A sustainable enterprise working in several communities or countries that is focused on increased efficiency
How many people does your solution currently serve?

Our solution extends to four townships in 2 regions of Ghana, namely Accra in the Greater Accra Region and Central Region with Moree, Cape Coast and Elmina. We have our 200 waste pickers and aggregators as well as over 100 household collectors spread in these areas.


Why are you applying to Solve?

I am super excited that i will be opportuned to meet a powerful network of impact-minded leaders across indistries and sectors at Solve's events.

Secondly, to receive technical support.

Thirdly, gain exposure in media to build my public speaking skills.

Lastly, access relevant in-kind resources and funding in the form of grants.

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Business Model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
  • Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
  • Human Capital (e.g. sourcing talent, board development)
  • Legal or Regulatory Matters
  • Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
  • Product / Service Distribution (e.g. delivery, logistics, expanding client base)
  • Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
  • Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Sebastian Appram
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Sebastian Appram
Sebastian Appram
Co-Founder
Anthony Yeboah
Anthony Yeboah
Hamdaratu Mateko Opata
Hamdaratu Mateko Opata
Emmanuel Ndemele
Emmanuel Ndemele