Description
What if cleaning up a city could also put money in people’s pockets?
This episode explores the inspiring case of Wecyclers, a Lagos-based social enterprise that uses incentives to change behavior, create jobs, and build a circular economy in one of Africa’s largest megacities. Founded in 2012, Wecyclers was born out of Lagos’s dual crisis of unmanaged waste and urban poverty—and a simple but powerful idea: reward households for recycling.
We trace how Wecyclers built a community-centered recycling system using low-cost cargo bikes, SMS and mobile technology, and a points-for-rewards program that allows residents to exchange recyclables for food, household goods, airtime, or cash. By embedding recycling into everyday life, Wecyclers reframed waste from a health hazard into a source of value.
The episode examines:
We also discuss the challenges Wecyclers has faced—volatile recycling markets, logistics in a megacity, regulatory shifts—and how it continues to adapt as Lagos moves toward a circular and climate-resilient future.
This case offers powerful lessons on behavior change, inclusive urban services, and how social enterprises can turn environmental problems into economic opportunities.
Key words
Wecyclers, Recycling in Lagos, Incentive-Based Recycling, Circular Economy, Urban Waste Management, Social Entrepreneurship in Africa, Waste-to-Wealth, Community Recycling, Climate Action, Green Jobs, Sustainable Cities, Behavior Change Innovation