February 2026: Tinkinga, tizatfu — netincwadzi teskolwa
- Mlandvo Dlamini
- Mar 12
- 2 min read

The Kent Rock Recycling Shed’s cash cow [metaphorically speaking] caught the foot-and-mouth virus and some peasants with a complete disregard of academic reasoning decided to put it on the braai stand — putting a complete halt to the Kent Rock Recycling Shed’s most valuable source of barcoded items from waste material: until further notice, the Kent Rock Recycling Shed experienced losses throughout the month February.
There’s also a communication breakdown with the Environmental Clubs in various tertiary institutions in located within the capital city of the Kingdom of ESwatini: including EMCU, LUCT, ECOT and EMRC [the Kent Rock Recycling Shed is working around the clock to ensure that these Environmental Clubs are fully registered before a formal partnership can be developed to setup operations on each respective campus to promote its solution to the most academically engaged proportion of the target group of ESwatini Environment Authority’s Waste Management Innovation Challenge {young women & girls between the ages of 18-35}].
To mitigate the ongoing stagnancy in its operations — the Kent Rock Recycling Shed recently managed to start setting up what will be called the LUCT Environmental Club House — this private residence, used a student accommodation facility, will be used to house the administration of the proposed LUCT Environmental Club which will soon be registered at Limkokwing University of Creative Technology.
The Kent Rock Recycling Shed continues to make an effort to utilize learning and calls for applications online to increase the quality of work: following an email invitation from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (Youth4Capacity) to enroll in a course they recently launched — the Kent Rock Recycling Shed managed to complete the program and received a certificate of completion.
The Kent Rock Recycling Shed’s strategy is to make use of its certifications to be awarded funding and technical support from ESwatini Environment Authority’s Waste Management Innovation Challenge, Stellenbosch University's Zero-Waste-to-Landfill Strategy and the Royal Science & Technology Park’s Sustainable Development Goals Innovative Enterprise Challenge.







Comments