India Waste Warriors Boost Circular Economy Movement
Startups across India are pioneering a wave of innovation in sustainable waste management, transforming environmental challenges into eco-friendly business opportunities.
Over a year since its debut at Bengaluru’s KPLEX 2024, unWOOD—a polymer-based alternative to hardwood introduced by Steer World—has evolved from a rough prototype to a refined, wood-like material poised to reshape construction norms. Founder Babu Padmanaban says unWOOD not only mimics the texture and durability of traditional wood but also tackles two pressing environmental issues: CO2 emissions and plastic waste. By diverting plastic from landfills and reducing deforestation, unWOOD exemplifies how materials innovation can serve climate goals.
The startup recently earned the Circular Economy Catalytic Grant from Climate KIC, an initiative designed to support ventures rethinking the way waste is generated, handled, and repurposed. Other grantees include Green Goobe and Green Aadhaar, both of which are developing scalable, community-rooted waste solutions. This shift underscores a growing preference for business models that prioritise sustainability alongside profitability. But the grant offers more than funding. It actively links winners with local industry players to foster deeper, system-level change. This collaborative approach aims to replace isolated green efforts with integrated strategies that ripple across supply chains and municipalities. Among the other recipients are Kosha AI and Ecorenowa, both tackling electronic and solar waste through data-driven and tech-enabled frameworks. From digital e-waste tracking to sustainable dismantling of outdated solar panels, these startups illustrate the powerful impact of a circular economy approach when paired with innovation and policy support.
With Indian cities grappling with mounting waste and rising climate concerns, such forward-thinking ventures are no longer niche experiments—they are a necessary blueprint for urban resilience.