The Menace of Sachet Water Plastic Bags in GhanaThe EPA Has a Solution

UDS officials carting away seedlings

EPA Tamale Nursery

Tree seedlings in sachet water plastices

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is attempting to kill two birds with one stone. It is using sachet water plastic bags littered around the Tamale Metropolis which pose a menace to the environment to nurse tree seedlings for free distribution to schools, district assembles and individuals. The EPA thus hopes to clean up the environment and green the environment in one venture.

Briefing ‘The Advocate’ about the exercise, Mr. Abu Iddrissu, Northern Regional Acting Director of the EPA said the venture is also aimed at offering employment and income to unemployed women and the youth. The local innovation started with the watchman of the agency who was made to collect the sachet bags and taught how to perforate them to create vents for air to go in and water to come out so that microbial activities can go on. He also received technical training on how to put in soil and at what level soil should be put into the plastic bags before seedlings are put in.

When the work proved too much for the watchman, young school leavers were recruited and paid to collect sachet water plastics to bag the seedlings. Women were also hired to undertake the bagging of seedlings. So far, the metropolis has been ridded of over 10,000 plastic sachet bags which are now home to various tree seedlings.

Mango seeds littered around the Aboabo market were collected and nursed into seedlings which were then transplanted with technical advice from the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MOFA) on how to water the seedlings and identify early pest infestations. The EPA also bought cassia and albezia seeds from the Forestry Department and the Integrated Tamale Fruit Company (ITFC) respectively which were also nursed into seedlings. Other seeds that were nursed into seedlings include neem, milk bush and cashew.

Recalling how the exercise was done, Mr. Iddrisu said “through technical training, we were made to know that the seeds should be parboiled before they are planted to hasten their germination. We carried out a floatation test to determine the good seeds which sink at the bottom of the water while the bad seeds float on top of the water. The good seeds were partially dried and planted. We were taught the angle of planting and the depth of planting. These are all techniques that our watchman and the other people recruited for the exercise learnt and implemented in the exercise.”

 Mr Iddirsu said the exercise forms part of the ‘Community and School Greening Programme’ of the EPA aimed at combating deforestation which is a serious problem in the Northern Region. “Given that most of the agency’s activities revolve around land restoration, land management, soil fertility restoration and degraded area management, providing seedlings to communities to encourage tree planting is one way of alleviating such problems”, he explained.

 Beneficiaries of the first batch of seedlings include the University for Development Studies (UDS) which was allocated 2000 seedlings for its greening project. Five districts out of the 20 districts in the region that have all been allocated seedlings have already taken a total of 2500 seedlings. Mr Iddrisu said the allocation of the seedlings to the district assemblies was in line with the EPA’s directive to the assemblies to establish assembly based woodlots to serve as an example to their communities which can be up scaled in future. However, a follow up on the proposal indicated that acquiring land for the establishment of assembly based woodlots as well as nurturing them into maturity was a problem to most of the assemblies. The seedlings were therefore distributed to schools to do avenue planting by the assemblies.

 The Tamale nursery is the only operational nursery in the ten regional EPA offices in the country and Mr. Iddrisu was optimistic that if the other offices of the EPA and other institutions concerned with environmental degradation undertook similar ventures, Ghana will come up strong in terms of afforestation and environmental sanitation.

 “Water sachet plastic waste has become a menace and the Northern, Upper East and Upper West regions which are the most deforested parts of the country can make use of it. With time, the sachet water producers and the retailers can take up the challenge of supplying the empty sachets. If they know that there is value added to the waste, there can be proper disposal so that they are bought at a cheap rate for re-use”, Mr Iddrisu said.

 Sachet water plastic bags are not bio-degradable and there is no recycling plant to recycle them which makes their disposal a burden to the authorities concerned. Meanwhile, there are over 13 sachet water production companies in the Tamale Metropolis, which is a booming business due to the high demand for treated water.

 The Northern Region has been plagued with water borne diseases in the past, including guinea worm disease, which necessitated the establishment of the Guinea Worm Eradication Programme in the region as a result of inadequate supply of potable water. The Tamale Metropolis was not spared and suffered repeated bouts of water shortages, forcing inhabitants to look for alternative sources of potable water with no water running through their taps.

 Sachet water, as it is popularly called, became indispensable around this time and even with the improvement in the water supply system, demand for it has been on a steady increase. It is not uncommon for people in homes with pipe borne water to depend on sachet water for their drinking needs. Sachet water is affordable, costing only fifty Ghana Pesewas and the size of the sachets make them convenient to carry around in one’s bag so people leaving their homes can carry it to wherever they are going to ensure that they have access to clean drinking water. The rising popularity and usage of sachet water has however led to environmental pollution calling for more innovative ways to get rid of the plastic waste that it generates.

Categories: Environment

Tamale Water Source under Threat As Nawuni River Silts

Destroyed banks of Nawuni River

Part of destroyed river bank

The Nawuni River, the only source of drinking water for the Tamale Metropolis in the Northern Region of Ghana is under serious threat. Its depth has reduced drastically due to siltation which has undermined its water holding capacity.

The siltation of the river as a result of sand winning activities along its banks poses a great danger to the metropolis, threatening the river’s future capacity for supplying the required volume of water to the metropolis.

The river, which has now been rendered shallow, is unable to contain the volume of water that flows into it during the rainy season. This has resulted in repeated flooding along its banks during the rainy season.

During a visit to the river by a group of journalists from Tamale, it was confirmed that flooding along the banks of the river have increased both in intensity and regularity. This does not only lead to a loss of life and property in the area but also reduces the amount of water the river feeds into the Akosombo Dam, the country’s major supplier of electricity.

The Nawuni River, also known as the White Volta flows into the Black Volta at Yeji which feeds into the Akosombo Dam.

The visit, which was organized by Ghana Developing Communities Association (GDCA) offered journalists the chance to observe at first hand sand winning activities at the river banks by contractors for the construction of roads and buildings. This has led to a massive desecration of the banks leaving in its wake loose soils that are easily washed into the river.

Mr Hardi Tijani, Programme Manager of GDCA expressed the need to redress sand winning at the river banks in view of the dangers it poses to the river. Visits to areas of the region showed how uncontrolled sand winning had desecrated farmlands, and destroyed a lot of vegetation including economic and medicinal trees.

He said research conducted by the GDCA in 29 communities in the region indicates that 190 hectares of land have already been destroyed by sand and gravel winning activities which has directly affected 177 families. In addition, 68 percent of all pits that were never reclaimed were dug by contractors and individual tipper truck owner-drivers.

According to Mr. Tijani, “All these people usually hire labour from young people in communities close to the river where the sand is mined.  In that wise the communities that settle close to the White Volta also contribute to the sand winning activities because they get monetary rewards.”

Ironically, the contractors pay ridiculous royalties to the chiefs and people of the communities. They pay as paltry as GH¢1.00 and GH¢2.00 per tipper truck load of sand. Yet they sell the same quantity of sand for GH¢100.00, almost 10,000% more than the royalty they pay. Sometimes, the sand winners give the communities a raw deal by fetching more trips than they paid for, says Tijani. Moreover the chiefs do not determine the location for mining; it is left to the discretion of the sand winners.

Tijani added that, “The business of the sand winning is free entry free exit. Due to this the chiefs are not consulted on where the sand is mined the winners only give out revenue to the chief through his representative. It is the winner who always prospect for new sites for sand winning without the chief’s consent. If the chief is not serious no revenue will be paid him.”

Some of the communities that suffer from the inequities of the sand winners are: Datalon in the Tamale Metro and Ying, Kulidanaaali, Kodugziegu and Dipali in the Savelugu/Nanton district where gravel winning is practiced. Afayili, Golazoli, Yuni and Gbrimkabani all in the Tolon/Kumbungu.

Presently there are no any conscious efforts to check the menace of sand winning in the affected communities. The GDCA, which operates in the affected communities, has taken up the challenge with the support of the KASA project. KASA is a civil society support mechanism that aims to support evidence-based research and advocacy in the natural resource and environment sector. KASA is funding the GDCA to create awareness about the disadvantage and dangers of indiscriminate sand winning.

“As of now there is no physical effort from any person, be they individual or organizations to mitigate sand winning activities in the affected areas,” says Tijani. “The only step taken so far by KASA, EPA and others is awareness creation on the dangers of sand winning in the mass media so that offenders might change their attitudes and behaviours towards the natural environment.”

If this indiscriminate sand winning continuous unchecked, the people of Tamale Metropolis may be deprived of sufficient water supply. The projected population of the Metropolis is 350,000. Currently the Metropolis requires 10 million gallons of water daily. By 2015, according to the Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL), it will require about 15 million gallons (49,392 cubic meters) daily.

Environmentalsits fear that if sand winning at Nawuni continues at the rate at which it is going,with the attendant siltation and degradation, the GWCL will not be able to meet its target and the people of Tamale will suffer for it. It will also contribute to negative climatic conditions.

TENI to the Rescue of 48,000 children in the Northern, Upper East and Upper West Regions of Ghana.

 

Happy School Children

Forty eight thousand school children in three districts of the Northern, Upper East and Upper West Regions of Ghana are to benefit from a 4.5 million pound innovation package in education.

The ten year innovation project, dubbed ‘Tackling Educational Needs Inclusively’ (TENI) is being funded by Comic Relief and the Volunteer Services Organisation (VSO). It would be implemented on a pilot basis in the Talensi Nabdam District in the Upper East Region, the Jirapa District in the Upper West Region and the West Mamprusi District in the Northern Region under the first phase which covers a five year period from 2009 to 2013.

The project involves a holistic approach to education in response to a myriad of problems militating against education in the three regions. These include low enrolment levels, low academic performance of school children in schools and a high dropout rate.

The Annual Education Sector Report for the 2008-2009 academic year indicates that 58.5 percent of candidates who wrote the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) in the Northern Region failed in Mathematics while 60.3 percent failed in English. In addition, only 10 percent of Children who reach primary six can read with understanding.

Besides, not all who enroll in primary one stay in school long enough to write their BECE; girls have a completion rate of 52 percent while boys have a completion rate of 67 percent at the JHS level.

TENI would attempt to tackle some of the root causes of low enrolment, poor performance and a high dropout rate in schools such as poverty barriers, socio-cultural beliefs, school environment and quality teaching. Due to the linkages that exist between the livelihoods of women and their ability to educate their children, the socio-economic status of women will be strengthened by linking them with various livelihood interventions. This will pave the way for them to support their children’s education by enrolling them in schools and providing them with what they need to perform well and remain in school until they attain a career.  

The project will also attempt to revamp the educational sector in beneficiary communities by building the capacity of 2000 teachers, including 500 national volunteer teachers, to support children to learn and to mentor them. In addition, the capacity 237 head teachers and circuit supervisors will be enhanced to support and mentor teachers in 80 percent of basic schools in the three participating districts.

TENI will also build up the management capacity of the various district directorates of education to enable them to carry out their supervisory and monitoring roles of educational institutions more effectively so as to address school and community based barriers to the education of girls and children with disabilities.  

At the community level, community leaders will be sensitized to appreciate education and adopt the necessary steps to promote education in their various communities. Additionally, the capacity of district assemblies will be strengthened to coordinate educational activities in their respective districts.        

Launching the first phase of the project at Walewale, Mr John Dramani Mahama, Vice President, urged parents and communities in

Ghana's Vice-President, John Dramani Mahama

 the catchment area to embrace and support the project, the VSO and her implementing partners by carrying out their expected roles.

“Communities should take an interest and participate in the running of their schools. Often communities stand aloof and think that schools are the responsibility of government, the district assemblies and teachers. Yet experience indicates that where communities have participated in the running of schools, it has led to an improvement in the quality of education”, he said

Mr. Mahama declared that government welcomes the complementary role played by Non-governmental organizations in development; especially in deprived communities and the VSO has been a true partner in education for over 50 years. “Your high quality international volunteers have been instrumental in improving quality teaching and learning which has culminated in the designing of TENI”, he said.  

The Vice President said Since TENI is based on the belief that change can only come from within the individual and the communities; it fits into the vision of the governments new educational plans. Government would therefore provide the needed policies and environment to ensure its success.     

He regretted that most people fail to give their children’s education the priority that it deserves because they cannot fathom the value associated with education. Hence, in the face of limited resources, education is often sacrificed for less rewarding activities due to ignorance.

“We have men who think they are entitled to a bottle of beer a day and would prefer to do that rather than save to pay their children’s school fees and we have women who would rather buy wax prints, an array of cooking utensils and pyrex bowls stocked up to the ceiling of their rooms than save towards their children’s education”, he said.

Children in school

However, quality education remains the bedrock for eliminating poverty and sustaining development since it has a liberating influence on the minds of its beneficiaries, therefore bringing them into the mainstream of development. Most parents today have no excuse anymore for not sending their children to school because of the capitation grant and other strategies such as the provision of free school uniforms and free exercise books aimed at making education more affordable to the poor and deprived.

 Mr. Mahama said there was the need for all to bear in mind that the task of providing quality and timely education for all children by 2015, which is one of the millennium goals, is a huge task whose responsibility falls not only on government but also on teachers, communities and the district assemblies..

In this regard, the fate of over 800, 000 Ghanaian children of school going age who are not in school as a result of ignorance, lack of infrastructure, outdated customary beliefs and practices, refusal of teachers to accept postings to deprived areas,  among several  others should be a worry for all 

He decried the fact that most young girls abandon their education to engage in Kayaye in the south in search of money. These girls, he said, are normally lured and attracted by the glittering things that those who have already engaged in kayaye bring back to show off in their communities.

Section of chiefs and elders at the launching

 They are however not aware of the deplorable conditions under which these girls live in the city, which is undignified and humiliating. Some sleep outside in the open air while others beg to sleep in kiosks and other structures not meant for accommodating human beings. “I will prefer my poverty in dignity than wealth in humiliation”, Mr. Mahama told the crowd of pupils, teachers, education officers and chiefs who had gathered to witness the occasion.

Categories: Education Tags: , , ,

District Assemblies adopt SEA’s in Medium Term Development Plans in Ghana

The National Development Planning Committee (NDPC) of the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning has made it mandatory for all Medium Term Development Plans submitted by all the 138 district assemblies in Ghana to include an environmental component.

Medium Term Development Plans that do not include an environmental component are not funded by the NDPC. This forms part of efforts to check environmental degradation by ensuring that district assemblies adopt development strategies that are environmentally friendly.

Consequently, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has provided capacity building training programmes for all district assemblies in the Northern Region on how to input Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) needs into their Medium Term Development Plans.

Briefing ‘The Advocate’, Mr. Abu Iddrissu, Acting Northern Regional Director of the EPA, said “because their annual budgetary allocation is tied to the SEA, all the district assemblies in the Northern Region have developed Medium Term Development Plans based on SEA tools without which they would not get some part of their funding.”

He said the capacity building training programmes were undertaken as part of the EPA’s Strategic District Environment Programme as well as their Comprehensive District Outreach Programme under which they visit district assemblies to discuss environmental issues with them.

Under the two programmes, the EPA also undertakes integrated district visits where they visit five core environmentally sensitive communities in each district. The visits are normally carried out in conjunction with members of the District Environmental Management Committee.

The EPA then designs appropriate actions in response to environmental problems encountered in those communities which most often are also captured in their community action plans. The EPA also draws the attention of the assemblies to those problems and provides strategic mechanisms for resolving them.

Mr. Iddrissu said the EPA also carries out Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) and Auditing.” We identify the different categories of development projects that impact on the environment such as the establishment of petrol stations, telecommunication masts, road projects, dams, educational infrastructure, clinics and hospitals. We inspect and register these projects and make technical inferences. We then pass them through a technical review committee and we certify and give them the conditionality under which they have to operate.”

The EPA carries out investigation of environmental complaints in all districts, regardless of whether they emanate from the communities themselves or from visits to the communities for which they provide technical backstopping, education and enforcement of laws to resolve the situation.

Some of such complaints include the misuse of agro –chemicals. Since it is the duty of the EPA to register and monitor the activities of agro-chemical and pesticide dealers, certify them, and provide training it intervened by by organising some training programmes.

Thus, a two day comprehensive training workshop was organized for the Ghana Agricultural Inputs Dealers Association (GAIDA) in conjunction with the International Fertilizer Development Centre ) IFDC  in Tamale and Yendi.  A total of 140 agro- input dealers in the region were trained, comprising agro-chemical retail dealers and agro-chemical users such as farmers.  

Mr Azimah Lansah Abdul-Rahman, District Desk Officer for EPA in the Savelugu Nanton District, said as far back as the year 2000, the EPA and the Institute of Local Government, organized a two week intensive training course on environmental management for all district assemblies in Northern Ghana.

He said they were taken through all the thematic areas in the activities of the EPA.  Following the workshop, he visited schools and communities in the district to discuss with them issues on the environment during which it was uncovered that the district had several environmental related problems.

The District Planning officer who is the team leader of the District Environmental Management Committee, incorporated environmental issues into their Medium Term Development Plan which normally has a four or five year lifespan depending on available funds and the time frame for the  projects. A task force was set up under the District Environmental Management Committee to respond swiftly to reports on allegations of activities that degrade the environment. 

Mr Addul Rahman said the services of the Police Force is sometimes sought to restore law and order on environmental issues in the communities where necessary. Such reports are also collated to enable the district to deliberate on them and adopt appropriate action.       

He named some members of the District Environmental Management team as National Disaster Management Committee (NADMO), the Gender Desk office, the Ghana Education Service (GES), the Department of  Social Welfare, the District Community Development Officer, the Environmental Health and Sanitation Unit, representatives of traditional rulers and the Town and Country Planning most of  whom already have baseline information about the environment and are given further training.

He said Community Environmental Management Committees have been set up and have been earmarked for training under the Ghana Environmental Management Project (GEMP) which was initiated in 2008 with funding from the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA).

High Enrollment Levels not Reflected in School Retention Levels in Ghana

The Volunteer Services Organization (VSO) has bemoaned the fact that increases in enrollment levels of children into basic schools in the Upper East, Upper West and Northern Regions of Ghana has not translated into their retention in the upper primary and Junior High schools (JHS).

Gender parity and the enrollment of children with disabilities which have also   improved at the enrollment level in recent years are not also reflected at the upper primary and JHS levels in these three regions.  

Speaking at the launch of an innovative project aimed at enhancing education in the three regions, the Country Director of VSO, Mr.

Amidu Ibrahim, Country Director, VSO

 Amidu Ibrahim, said those children who manage to transit into upper primary and JHS have generally under performed in all educational tests as compared to their colleagues in other parts of the country.

Hence, it is against the backdrop of these problems that the new project, dubbed “Tackling Education Needs Inclusively (TENI) is being implemented to address all issues that militate against quality education holistically to ensure the retention, high performance levels and improved completion rates of school children in the three affected regions by the year 2013.

The first phase of the 10 year project will initially be implemented in the Talensi Nabdam District in the Upper East Region, the Jirapa District in the Upper West Region and the West Mamprusi District in the Northern Region from the year 2009 to 2013. During this phase, TENI will improve the retention rate of pupils in 80 percent of the schools in the selected districts and their transition to JHS by 30 percent, targeting about 50,000 pupils, 50 percent of whom will be girls. 

School children in the Northern Region

The 4.5 million phase one TENI project which is being co-funded with 3 million pounds from Comic Relief and 1.5 million pounds from the VSO will support the development of educational strategies that integrate child-centred and inclusive methodologies into pre-service teacher training.

It will also support continuous assessment and performance of pupils through School Performance Reviews (SPRs), advocate for improved teacher motivation to enhance their performance and conduct more research on best practices that ensure systematic change in education in the Upper East, Upper West and Northern Regions.

Under the TENI project, the capacities of implementing partners and civil society organizations would be strengthened to whip up their ability to engage with the state to guarantee quality education. Implementing partners are the Link Community Development (LCD) in the Upper East Region, PRONET North in the Upper West Region, Integrated Social Development Centre (ISODEC) in the Northern Region and the National Service Scheme (NSS).

Mr. Ibrahim said the Kayayei phenomenon is a terrible indictment on the quality of support that girls receive at home, from their communities and in schools to enable them to access quality education. Some of the causes that undermine support for education include the lack of teachers in classrooms, especially in the rural and deprived areas, and the incapacity of teachers to support all children in their learning. The lack of trained teachers is also another factor with only about a 100 out of the 500 teachers at the primary level in the West Mamprusi District being trained teachers.

Other factors include the weak engagement between communities, district assemblies and school authorities to improve quality education for all children and socio-cultural believes and practices that discriminate against girls and children with disabilities thus denying them access to quality education.

He noted that, set against this gloomy picture are the efforts of government at making quality education available and affordable to all children. These range from the upgrading of teacher training colleges and incentives for teachers serving in deprived areas to the establishment of the Savanna Accelerated Development Authority (SADA) which will provide the development framework, the coordination and the synergy for all development efforts in the three regions covered by the project.

Mr. Ibrahim said TENI seeks to build on and support these efforts to ensure that all stakeholders work together to break the socio economic barriers to the retention and performance of children in schools.      

In a welcoming address the West Mamprusi District Chief Executive, Mr. Sulley Abudu Zackaria , said two notifying government interventions, the school feeding programme and the capitation grant, have significantly enhanced education in Ghana. He lauded the recent increment of 100 percent per child in the capitation grant, saying, it will further go to consolidate the gains that government has made by introducing these interventions.  

He mentioned the vastness of the district coupled with its scattered human settlements which are inundated by a number of rivers and streams as one of the challenges facing education in the district. The district also has inadequate professional teachers since most professional teachers refuse postings to the area because of the difficulties associated with the terrain, the poor road network and the lack of social amenities such as electricity and water. Poverty, rural urban drift of children of school going age, absenteeism among teachers, teenage pregnancy, and the negative attitude towards female education were also cited as some challenges.

The Chairman for the occasion, Naa Professor Nabila, Chief of Mamprugu Traditional Area and President of the National House of Chiefs,  said education is the best gift that any parent can give to a child and opens doors of opportunities that would otherwise be  closed if one were not educated. He therefore extended gratitude to VSO and Comic relief for taking the initiative to invest in the education of children in the three beneficiary districts.

Naa Professor NabilaA section of chiefs and elders at the ceremony

Methane Gas from Tamale Landfill Fuels Global Warming.

 

Methane gas escaping through vents in the Tamale Landfill  in the Northern Region of Ghana is contributing to global warming, the Environmental Protection Council (EPA) has warned.

Methane, a greenhouse gas, is produced by bacteria as a by-product of anaerobic respiration during the bio-degradation of waste that occurs in landfills. Since the gas is flammable, if it is allowed to accumulate, it would reach a level that if there is a fire, there would be a big disaster. Fires at landfill sites are difficult to extinguish because of the presence of methane. Furthermore, if the gas remains within the landfill, it will prevent other micro-organisms from working and the waste will not be degraded.

However, the present method of getting rid of the gas by simply allowing it to escape is of grave concern to environmentalists because while atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide has risen by about 31 percent since pre-industrial times, methane concentration has more than doubled.

As a greenhouse gas, methane is 21 times more powerful than carbon dioxide and remains in the atmosphere for nine to 15 years. It is the second most important human induced greenhouse gas and accounts for about a fifth of warming effects.  Its chief sources are landfill sites, fossil fuel energy and agriculture, especially rice and livestock farming. Other sources are coal mining, waste water treatment, stationary and mobile combustion and some industrial processes.

The effect of methane emissions is also compounded by the fact that, methane-induced warming in turn stimulates microbial decay of organic matter in wetlands, the primary natural source of methane. Scientists have expressed fears that deposits of methane and similar gases trapped in normally frozen ground in the arctic constitute a time bomb and may thaw out and spew into the atmosphere if global warming continues unabated.

Commenting on the issue, Mr. Abu Iddrissu, Northern Regional Director of the EPA said methane trapping remains the best solution to the problem. This would not only curtail its global warming effects but would also provide household gas for cooking in hospitals, schools and other institutions which will in turn  reduce their overreliance on fuel wood thus saving our forests.

He said the aspect of methane trapping as a waste management process can be contracted to private companies to undertake as a business venture if it falls beyond the capacity of the Tamale Metropolitan Assembly which is currently managing the landfill.

He called for the landfill to be condoned off or fenced completely. Presently, it has only been partially fenced with the lee end, where water has accumulated exposed to the public thus allowing goats, vultures and other animals to stray into it.

Mr. Iddrissu stressed the need to regulate the waste in the land fill site by partitioning the waste. “Hazardous waste such as clinical and biomedical waste, car batteries and ordinary torchlight batteries should not be mixed with ordinary waste. Labour should be hired to sort out hazardous waste from plastic waste and organic waste”.

He criticized the mode of transportation of waste to the site and the management of the site, saying, “Waste vehicles transporting waste to the landfill site should be covered and after the waste has been dumped at the close of the day, it should be covered so that it would not be blown around by wind. Presently, there is 24 hour access to the site which should not be so. Anybody can just walk in, and people living in communities close to the site walk into it and scavenge its contents”

 Furthermore, the Tamale landfill was not built up to modern standards. While it is a requirement that the sides of landfills should be lined with clay or absorbent material to prevent liquid from seeping into ground water leading to its pollution, the Tamale landfill is unlined.

Data collection on the kind of wastes in the landfill to facilitate the recycling of waste has also been neglected. 

“It important to keep data on the kind and quantity of waste in the landfill since it constitutes a repository for research. We should be able to tell the weight of plastics or bio-degradable material coming in as well as the amount of fluid and methane coming out. Then if there is the need for the assembly to purchase a waste re-cycling plant or a plastic plant, based on the tonnage of plastics coming in, they can tell whether such a project would be sustainable and can generate enough pellets of plastic for sale or whether fertilizer can be produced from organic waste material However, in the absence of hard data, you cannot tell. ”, Mr Iddrissu said. 

He regretted that present figures on waste are based on the sum of all the waste coming in, saying, “The present waste management system does not allow for composting to produce organic manure. What we are battling with is simply waste collection. If the bio-degradable ones are sort from the non bio-degradable ones, then we can think of composting.”

Mr Iddrissu said since the landfill can create jobs if managed successfully, the Tamale Metropolitan Assembly should seek assistance outside its own doors by throwing the challenge to research institutions such as the University for Development Studies (UDS) to research on how to create  livelihoods and generate income from the site; “It is a repository for making money to undertake all the development projects we need in Tamale and there would even be reserves yet we are wasting it.”

“The technical knowhow to turn the waste into useful products is not available hence there is the need for policy makers to link up with academia and manufacturing industries”, he explained.

He suggested some potential uses of the waste as the recycling of plastic waste for the manufacturing of plastic yam stakes, car and motor bike plates and materials for pegging during road construction as well as signboards and bill boards while waste paper can be recycled into affordable toilet roll.

Mr Iddriss said since yam stakes result in the destruction of a lot of small trees in a year, if plastic materials were turned into yam stakes, they would not only rid the environment of waste but also reduce the dependency on trees and preserve the environment.

Children in the Forefront to Restore Ghana’s Forest

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