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India’s Plastic Recycling Industry

Scaling solar isn’t just about energy, it’s about strategy, infrastructure, and execution.
Discover how it all comes together. Download the report by ProsperETE.
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The global transition to clean energy is gathering pace, but financing solar at scale remains one of the toughest challenges. Africa, with some of the world’s richest solar resources, is also where this gap is most pronounced. Projects are abundant, but capital often hesitates - citing risks, fragmentation, and lack of bankable structures.

The story of Nuru Energy in the Democratic Republic of Congo makes the same point. Despite having strong investor backing - including global names in climate and impact finance - the project struggled to move forward. The issue wasn’t capital scarcity, but the lack of affordable risk mitigation solution that could de-risk investments and accelerate execution.

 

Across Africa, this story repeats itself. Despite the continent’s vast solar potential and more than 660 million people lacking stable access to electricity, Africa today accounts for just ~1% of global installed solar capacity and receives less than 1% of global solar investment.

This is where the Global Solar Facility (GSF) comes in. Conceived with the International Solar Alliance (ISA) and structured by ProsperETÉ, the facility was designed to do more than finance a few projects. It was built to be a global blueprint: starting in Africa, but ready to be replicated across Asia, Latin America, and other emerging regions. The guiding principle throughout was simple - think scale, manage risk, and execute with discipline.

India’s plastic recycling sector offers investors a rare combination of high-growth potential, policy- backed demand, and fragmented supply chains ripe for consolidation. As the country’s plastic consumption soars and regulations tighten, the need for formal, scalable recyclers with tech-enabled traceability and end-market linkages has never been greater.

Curious about what’s really happening in India’s plastic recycling ecosystem?
Download ProsperETE’s latest report to explore the key insights and findings.

6. A Blueprint Beyond Africa

While Africa is the starting point, the GSF was never meant to stop there. Its structure is deliberately replicable. The same blended finance model, governance design, and project pipeline approach can be applied in Asia, Latin America, and Small Island States.

In this sense, the GSF is more than a fund - it is a financing model for the global energy transition, one that takes lessons from Africa facility and scales them worldwide.

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Conclusion: Scale Meets Structure
 
ProsperETÉ’s journey with the Global Solar Facility is not a one-off project but part of a larger legacy. Over the years, our team has successfully set up eight investment and financing platforms — from India’s first infrastructure-focused fund with SBI Macquarie to pioneering programs such as Scaling Solar Africa. Each initiative reinforced a core belief: when scale meets structure, and risk meets resilience, global capital flows to climate solutions.
The Global Solar Facility embodies this belief — starting in Africa, but with the potential to transform solar investment across the world.

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