03/09/2022 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/09/2022 12:42
IDB Lab, the innovation laboratory of the Inter-American Development Bank, has invested $1 million in Sugo Company, a climate technology startup from Peru that offers innovative solutions to generate tangible value in waste. This support will allow the company to expand to all cities throughout Peru and at a regional level in Colombia, Mexico, and Chile and promote the circulate economy.
Annually, millions of tons of food and consumer products that are still usable are wasted in the world. In Latin America about 10% of total retail production is at risk of being discarded, and the impact of global food waste alone represents 8% of total greenhouse gas emissions which accelerate the rate of global warming.
To incentivize a world without waste, Sugo Company, born in 2019, has developed two products that materialize and encourage the zero waste agenda:
IDB Lab's investment adds to a seed round of USD $5.5 million, in which other leading investors in the region, such as NAZCA and FEMSA Ventures, participate. It allows Sugo Store to expand its reach in the regional market and launch the first version of CoreZero to be integrated into similar initiatives of strategic partners in the region and the United States, creating the first carbon credits as a result of the reduction of discarded items.
This project is expected to rescue more than 65 million products from having to be discarded, which would generate an economic savings of USD $137 million for consumers, as well as sequestering 8 million tons of CO2 emissions per year in the fight against climate change.
About IDB Lab
IDB Lab is the innovation laboratory of the IDB Group, the leading source of development finance and know-how for improving lives in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). The purpose of IDB Lab is to drive innovation for inclusion in the region, by mobilizing financing, knowledge, and connections to test early-stage solutions with the potential to transform the lives of vulnerable populations affected by economic, social, and/or environmental factors. Since 1993 IDB Lab has approved more than US$ 2 billion in projects deployed across 26 LAC countries. www.idblab.org