Kampala launches waste-to-energy plant

Kampala's massive garbage problem just got a potential fix with a new facility turning organic waste into cooking gas and fertilizer.

The new waste-to-energy plant
  • KCCA and Homeklin Ltd launched the facility in Nsambya.
  • It converts biodegradable waste into biogas and organic fertilizer.
  • The goal is diverting organic waste away from overstretched landfills like Kiteezi.
  • Methane emissions from decomposing garbage get cut in the process.
Scale of Kampala's trash problem
  • The city generates roughly 730,000 tonnes of waste every year.
  • Most of it currently ends up in landfills with no value recovery.
  • Air pollution and groundwater contamination are tied to poor waste handling.
  • Population growth keeps making the situation worse.
KCCA's take on the project
  • Executive Director Sharifah Buzeki called it a major leap for urban waste management.
  • Buzeki framed biogas production as turning trash into actual value.
  • She invited more private-sector players to invest in similar ventures.
  • Clean energy generation and climate resilience are both on the agenda.

Behavior change is the catch
  • Homeklin Managing Director Isaac Katureebe says household-level sorting is non-negotiable.
  • Mixing organic and non-organic waste wrecks recycling and energy recovery.
  • A citywide campaign promoting waste separation is already rolling out.
  • Households that sort properly get free collection as an incentive.
 

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