Global FMCG giant Unilever plans to spend 100 million euros (over Rs 700 crore) by 2019 on sanitation programmes in India while it looks to become a key partner in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Clean India campaign.
The company that sells brands such as Lifebuoy, Domex and Pureit for sanitation and clean drinking water apart from a host of products through its arm Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), is also for partnering the Government in the smart cities and Make in India initiatives.
Stating that there is “a tremendous opportunity” in the clean India campaign, Unilever CEO Paul Polman told presspersons the company would focus on major cities in each of the States and set the standards.
“We will, if you take now and end of the decade 2020 or 2019, which is what the Prime Minister has taken as the year because of the 150th anniversary year (of Mahatma Gandhi’s birth), we would be spending 100 million euro,” he said when asked how much Unilever would spend on the initiative.
He further said: “We can put Lifebuoy, Pureit and Domex together and create a really bigger programme together with the Government and other companies to really join Clean India.”
Elaborating on the enormity of the task in driving home the message of sanitation in India, he said: “In India 98 per cent of households have soap in their house, but they don’t do hand washing all the time. In terms of sanitation, globally we have reached about 300 million people, in India we have reached 65 million people with our hand washing campaigns.”
“One of the things which we need to do in India for the Clean India campaign is to scale that up to 200 to 300 million people.”
Polman, who met Modi yesterday, said they discussed Clean India and the firm is looking at partnering the Government in a bigger manner.
“We would even look into a bigger and faster role because ambitions have not been set. The smart cities and Make in India, which also has to be done at rapidly and clean India, we have many opportunities there,” Polman added.
Commenting on the company’s business in India, he said: “Our India business is very pretty healthy. We have doubled in five-six years. It continues to be one of the top companies in India.”
Bullish on India, Polman said: “People are very optimistic now about the Indian economy, so (there is) lots of hope. The changes that are taking place, investment is doubling.”
Citing the IMF forecast of 6.5 per cent growth for India in 2016-17, he said: “We should expect India to pick up and see by 2016-17 significant increase in growth.”