Ocean Sole says it recycles between 750,000 and one million flip flops a year and has created around 100 full-time jobs
Volunteers collect plastic waste during a cleaning exercise organized by Ocean Sole Africa, in Kilifi county
Image: Simon Mania / AFP
Tangled in seaweed, buried in sand, washed up in rock pools—tattered old flip flops are an eyesore on Kenya's beaches, flushed out of rivers or carried across the sea from Asia and beyond.
They are the footwear of choice for much of the world but cheap flip flops, like other plastic trash, are polluting oceans and pristine white-sand beaches like Kilifi on the Indian Ocean.
"Rich, poor, everybody has got a pair," said Lillian Mulupi from Ocean Sole, a Kenyan enterprise that recycles discarded flip flops and other plastic garbage found on beaches and waterways into colourful sculptures and children's toys.
"Since they're very easy to afford, when a pair is done you just throw it away and get a new one. So you get a lot of it ending up on our beaches."