Acumen, GE Hold Collaboration Summit in Nairobi

Nigeria aims to boost oil production by 500,000 bpd by 2020

Acumen, in partnership with General Electric,GE, kicked off its fourth annual Collaboration Summit today in Nairobi. Acumen, a nonprofit impact investor, created the summit to bring social enterprises and international corporations together to catalyze inclusive business models that address Africa’s biggest social challenges.

The Collaboration Summit is expected to be a key part of Acumen’s Technical Assistance Initiative , a five-year $1 million program that aims to accelerate the growth and impact of its portfolio companies so they become sustainable, financially viable and inclusive of poor and marginalized communities.

According to Acumen’s East Africa Director, Duncan Onyango, “At Acumen, we believe there is much for social enterprises and large businesses to learn from each other and achieve together,”

“With GE’s support, we are working to cultivate an environment that enables companies, big and small, to understand the shared value of partnerships, strategically integrate social and environmental values into their models and ensure the success of all stakeholders.”

For this year’s Collaboration Summit, held at the Villa Rosa Kempinski Hotel, Acumen gathered a select number of committed multinationals and more than 15 of its social enterprises to work together on redefining business’s role in driving social impact and growing inclusive emerging markets.

GE offered its support as the sole Summit Partner while Dow supported as a Technical Assistance Initiative Partner and Intellecap as a Knowledge Partner, leading a Summit session on partnerships to improve healthcare access.

“We’re delighted to be part of this year’s Collaboration Summit to share ideas and learnings on doing business that drives social impact and inclusive growth in Africa,” said GE Africa’s President and CEO Jay Ireland.

“We see GE as partners in building Africa’s sustainable future and I’m looking forward to working with the participating social entrepreneurs to explore innovative solutions to Africa’s challenges.”

This year’s summit focuses on the challenges holding emerging markets back—including those obstacles facing individual companies as well as entire industries like agriculture or renewable energy—and solutions that involve players from across big and small business, government, and civil society.

Some of Acumen’s participating investments include: Esoko (https://Esoko.com), a mobile platform that provides Africa’s rural farmers with agronomic tips and market access that will improve their incomes; Devergy (https://Devergy.com), a social enterprise that delivers affordable, reliable solar energy to low-income communities living off the grid; and Sanergy (http://APO.af/wwi3cx), a company that provides residents of Kenya’s slums with affordable sanitation, and produces organic fertilizer to improve soil quality for Kenyan farms. Additional participating corporations involved include Unilever (www.Unilever.com) and Barclays (www.home.Barclays), both partners of the Technical Assistance Initiative, and EY (www.EY.com), which provides professional services to some of Acumen’s portfolio companies in the region.

“When we started this initiative we hoped that leading global corporations could help social enterprises to scale,” said Yasmina Zaidman, Acumen’s Director of Strategic Partnerships. “Now we know that these enterprises, through their focus on underserved markets and breakthrough innovation, can be powerful allies to corporations as well.”

Since its founding, Acumen has invested more than $101 million in 92 companies in East and West Africa, Southeast Asia, Latin America and the United States to support a wide range of sustainable, scalable businesses using marketbased approaches to deliver products and services to the poor. Though the Collaboration Summit, Acumen and the Summit participants are working to find ways to expand these innovations to impact millions of lives across East and West Africa.