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Kubik builds low-carbon homes from plastic waste

GIIG Africa’s investment into Kubik comes as the startup was named the African winner in the category of Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) Technology and Startup of the Year at the African Startup Awards in June 2022. Photo: Supplied/Ventureburn
GIIG Africa’s investment into Kubik comes as the startup was named the African winner in the category of Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) Technology and Startup of the Year at the African Startup Awards in June 2022. Photo: Supplied/Ventureburn

The award-winning sustainable technology startup Kubik has announced its latest seed-stage investment from the GIIG Africa Fund. The raise establishes GIIG Africa as the startup’s lead investor, with the funds to be used to scale Kubik’s production capabilities in East Africa.

Founded in 2021, Kubik has received global recognition for its technology that recycles plastic waste into a variety of low-carbon and low-cost building materials, which replace costly and polluting cement-based materials. Its product is at least 40% cheaper, twice as fast to build with, and 5x less polluting than conventional materials.

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Partnering with real estate developers, Kubik will focus the utility of its technology towards servicing the affordable housing and public infrastructure sectors. Kubik has a multi-million-dollar revenue pipeline already lined up – a testament to the market’s reception and excitement for its product.

GIIG Africa’s investment into Kubik comes as the startup was named the African winner in the category of Environment, Social & Governance (ESG) Technology and Startup of the Year at the African Startup Awards in June 2022.

This is the largest independent startup ecosystem competition on the continent and exclusive vehicle for the GIIG Africa Fund to find, fund and scale Africa’s most innovative startups with Sustainable Development Goal (SDG)-aligned solutions.

Kidus Asfaw, co-founder and chief executive of Kubik. Photo: Supplied/Ventureburn

“We’re incredibly excited to welcome GIIG Africa as a strategic investor and partner within our growth journey,” says Kidus Asfaw, co-founder and CEO of Kubik.

“Their partnership goes beyond capital, and we appreciate the team’s openness and enthusiasm to join our existing partners, including Savannah Fund, JLL Foundation, and a variety of angel investors across the United States, Europe and Africa.

“GIIG is going to play a key role in helping us capitalise on purposeful growth opportunities, as we aim to radically scale our production capabilities in 2023. Ahead of then, we’re looking forward to welcoming additional strategic partners to our investor-base.”

The need for sustainable, durable, and low-cost building materials comes as Africa experiences a booming population growth amid ongoing challenges to poverty and inequality.

By 2050, the continent will be home to 2.4-billion people (or roughly 25% of the global population.

With economic growth and job creation concentrated in cities, researchers anticipate rapid urbanisation and a subsequent housing crisis which will affect 900-million Africans across the continent – representing a $2-trillion market opportunity for businesses in the affordable housing sector.

Commenting on their investment into Kubik, Mahyar Makhzani, co-founder of GIIG Africa, explains: “It’s Kidus’s bold ambition and innate sense of purpose that motivated our interest to support Kubik on its mission to change the face of the African construction industry.

“Africa is a continent of unparalleled opportunity – but it is also a region with important challenges that need to be addressed, and it is this unique situation that positions it as an ideal sandbox in which to pioneer affordable and sustainable solutions more cheaply, more flexibly and more inclusively. Kubik is a prime example of this, and we look forward to supporting Kidus and his team on their important journey.”

In addition to solving Africa’s looming housing crisis, Kubik also seeks to address the impact of plastic waste on both people and the planet. As reported by the World Wildlife Fund, plastic production emits greenhouse gasses, which harm ecological biodiversity and cause chronic illnesses in nearby communities.

Once used, plastic waste then flows into waterways and dump sites, which further impacts the wellbeing of local industry and wildlife.

“This is part of why we’re aiming to ramp-up our production capabilities,” says Asfaw. “By September of 2023, our first factory will launch with capabilities to recycle 45 metric tonnes of plastic waste every day.

“The materials made from this will be used to build roughly 5 000 affordable homes per year – avoiding more than 100 000 metric tonnes of carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases emissions annually and supporting the creation of more than 10 000 women-led jobs within the waste collection and construction sectors.”

To identify, support and scale likeminded solutions to Africa’s sustainable development, the Global Startup Awards Africa has also announced the launch of the next season of the African Startup Awards, with entries now open.

Click here to learn more about GSA Africa.

ALSO READ: ScarabTech secures seed raise from GIIG Africa Fund

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