A year after the Ghana Climate Innovation Centre (GCIC) inducted its first cohort of entrepreneurs, the innovation hub is looking to make deeper impact within the climate space across Ghana.
Located on Ashesi’s campus, the GCIC, in the past year, has engaged with entrepreneurs in a wide range of areas within the green energy space. From bicycles produced from bamboo, to water purification processes, to recycling charcoal, to domestic waste management, the centre is helping small to medium scale companies expand their impact within their communities.
“Internally, we’re growing, not just in terms of numbers, but in terms of our focus,” says Ruka Sanusi, CEO of the GCIC. “We have a better understanding of the purpose and practice of incubation, and what the profit of incubation is about. Knowing what good looks like is really useful. We’ve engaged with a number of incubators in both the developing and developed economies, and we’ve identified key components we can incorporate within our context to enhance our impact, not only for the entrepreneurs, but for the country at large.”
In the past year, the incubation hub has awarded $124,900 in grants to its incubatees, published an industry report and continues to provide a wide bouquet of services to the entrepreneurs. Additionally, through their road-trips across the country, the GCIC is helping raise awareness among locales as to how they can help to protect the environment.
“Learning from the earlier cohorts, we are creating clearer and more structured goals for not only ourselves, but also for the entrepreneurs,” she said. “What is really important is that incubation is not just about giving grants, it’s also about incubating innovations that will not only have economic benefit, but will also have environmental impact and social benefit as well. So as a team, we have a responsibility to do this well. As cohort one graduates at the end of May 2018, we’ll collect pre- and post-incubation metrics, CO2 emissions reduced, carbon footprint, number of households reached, so we can measure how well we are actually doing.”
“Everyday it becomes clearer to us that the centre has a lot to offer Ghana,” she explained. “I’m glad we’re bringing people to the fore about the reality of the entrepreneurial journey. We hope to significantly reduce CO2 emissions, impact households, create jobs, and connect entrepreneurs with the right resources to create the needed impact.”