‘Manufacturing meets sustainability’ — minister commends Coca-cola’s packaging collection hub
The minister noted that the hub is an industrial landscape where manufacturing meets sustainability, and industry produces output and impact.

By Idris Temidayo
John Enoh, the minister of state for industry, has commended the Coca-Cola System for its investment in the packaging collection hub to address the waste collection challenge in Nigeria.
Enoh, who spoke in Lagos at the commissioning of the hub in Apapa, described the facility as a bold step that would redefine Nigeria’s industrial landscape.
The minister noted that the hub is an industrial landscape where manufacturing meets sustainability, and industry produces output and impact.
“Establishing this hub by the Coca-Cola System, comprising Coca-Cola Nigeria and the Nigeria bottling partner of CCHBC, Nigerian Bottling Company Limited, marks an important moment in our national industrial journey,” he said.
“It demonstrates what happens when industries rise beyond profit and embrace responsibility to the environment for job creation.”
Enoh affirmed that the federal government, through the federal ministry of industry, trade and investment, is unwavering in its commitment to achieving its mandates.
He noted that the mandates include strengthening industrial clusters, deepening local production and backward integration and creating a self-sustaining industrial ecosystem that is globally competitive.
He lauded the Coca-Cola System for investing in the hub and proving that manufacturing can be a force for good.
“Let the world know—Nigeria is not waiting for an industrial revolution. We are building it. Waste is no longer waste—it is a resource, an economic asset, and a tool for wealth creation,” he said.
“The age of reckless extraction and waste is over. The new industrial economy is circular, regenerative, and smart.
“If an industry does not recycle, it will soon become obsolete. If a manufacturer does not embed sustainability, it will lose relevance.
“That is why this initiative is so powerful. It ensures that waste is no longer waste—it is raw material, it is opportunity, it is industry.”
He stressed further that the hub will enable a new industrial value chain in which plastic is not discarded but repurposed, collectors are not sidelined but empowered, and businesses become more resilient by being more responsible.
Enoh also expressed excitement at the number of jobs the hub will create and the countless others in the recycling value chain.
According to him, the Coca-Cola system has demonstrated through its action that the industrial Nigeria we look forward to is possible.
“This is the blueprint for the future: industries that innovate, manufacturers that take responsibility, and a government that enables prosperity through smart policies,” he added.