
Chad Robertson, Regenize co-Founder & CEO
“Yet they operate in dangerous, unregulated conditions, sorting waste by hand, moving through landfill sites and city streets with no guarantee of income or social protection.”He stresses that municipal or private recycling systems rarely interact meaningfully with this workforce. “Without proper infrastructure, access to clean recyclables, transport, PPE, or formal recognition, they remain uncompensated essential workers in a broken supply chain.” Each decentralised recycling hub created by REACT provides reclaimers with access to clean recyclables from at least 1200 households, increase income by up to 300% , uniforms, PPE, tablets for tracking, and formal integration into the recycling process – turning them into formally employed partners and can enjoy the basic labour rights we all enjoy in South Africa. Households earn Remali points after each recycling collection. These points are credited instantly and can be converted into tangible resources either online or through our network of shops in our operational community. Within the next 12 months, REACT will be setting up another 31 decentralised recycling hubs taking them to 36 in total in the Cape Town region. These hubs will provide their free recycling collection service to 43 200 households, create 180 jobs for waste reclaimers while diverting around 5500 tonnes annually. “If South Africa wants credible recycling, it must honour – and compensate – its waste reclaimers. Regenize’s REACT rewrites the narrative: reclaimers are not charity cases – they are frontline agents of sustainability. And when recycling becomes fair, participation and impact follow,” he concludes.