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Business , Green jobs , Press

Green economy can tackle SA youth job crisis and aid the planet

By Admin
May 13, 2024

Publication: Top Empowerment: Impumelelo, Page: 50

Publish Date: 09 April 2024

 

The green economy is an innovative and social enterprises ecosystem that is reducing youth unemployment, as shown in Nedbank initiatives. Underpinned by its commitments to the green economy, Nedbank's social and economic development initiatives demonstrate compelling solutions to the challenge of youth unemployment and skilling young people for the jobs of the future.

 

"In a world where climate change poses an imminent risk to the livelihoods, health and well-being of communities, Nedbank has decided to support initiatives of the green economy that are providing tangible social and economic value, transforming lives and having a measurable impact," says Poovi Pillay, Nedbank’s Executive Head of Corporate Responsibility.

 

Statistics continue to paint a disconcerting picture despite some recent gains reported in the latest Quarterly Labour Force Survey which pointed to a reduction in the unemployment rate in Q3 of 2023. Nedbank’s response to this challenge is underpinned by our belief that sustainable socioeconomic development is a moral and business imperative.

 

"It has been gratifying to develop and implement an integrated, innovative corporate social investment strategy that is changing the lives of individuals who have needed sometimes quite simple interventions — from skills transfer to work experience opportunities, or capital," says Pillay. "Through our initiatives — and in partnership with individuals, organizations and social enterprises that are providing sustainable and material benefit to communities and people — we are shifting the dial and seeing the impact that small interventions can play in enhancing the lives of those most in need," adds Pillay.

 

Flowing from this strategy, a compelling synergy was harnessed with the Nedbank Youth Employment Service (YES) Programme. For some of the roles available, YES youth receive training in the jobs of the future before being deployed to social enterprises in the sustainable energy sector and to nonprofit organizations in the environmental conservation sphere.

 

Through YES, Nedbank is also responding to South Africa‘s renewable energy needs. Nedbank funds the training and employment of youth to do this work, in partnership with Afrika Tikkun and KPCares, which have both employed young people to help install solar panels.


Four pillars of the green economy

The Nedbank Foundation has four focus areas that are integral to the green economy's success, namely, water, agriculture, waste, and energy. Responding to immediate socio-economic needs in rural and peri-urban communities, the Nedbank Foundation supports innovative social enterprises that have created 841 jobs in 2023 alone.

 

Among the flagship projects are Kusini Water, which sells affordable drinking water in peri-urban communities in seven provinces; a partnership with AgriSA, Timbali Technical Incubator, and Reel Gardening, which support food security, and the scaling of farming activities. In the area of waste management, Nedbank has partnered with Dziphathu Green Tech, which converts plastic into valuable material.

 

With the last focus area, energy, the Nedbank Foundation has partnered with In Pursuit Projects and Technology Services which provides alternative energy solutions with a focus on sustainable energy solutions across Africa.

 

"Marrying Nedbank's sustainability objectives with the need to address poverty, inequality and unemployment, and supporting SMEs and local communities were key to our approach," says Pillay. "We have more work to do to earn the trust and buy-in of local communities — and this will require that communities and the most vulnerable in society are able to share in the value created through green economy initiatives. It‘s about demonstrating that environmental stewardship does not mean lower economic growth or fewer job opportunities, as some commentators believe."

 

"It is quite the opposite," says Pillay. "The green economy is an essential component for both saving the planet as well as stimulating informal economies and creating jobs for young people who have the right skills and attitude needed to secure people's livelihoods and our planet‘s future," Pillay concludes.

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