Today, I would like to explore an article
found on IRIN News called ‘GHANA: Government declares recycling war on plastic waste’. IRIN News is "a service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs". The article was written in July 2004, about a program that the Ghanaian government launched to eliminate waste generated in Accra.
As we can now see, nine years later, recycling has not solved the problem of plastic waste. Some may see it as a problem for the economy, due to the effects it may have on tourism, yet go to Osu and you know tourism is not suffering extensively. Since plastics have replaced leaves, glass and metal as a cheaper, and more efficient means of packaging, this non-biodegradable waste has been collecting around the country, choking drains, threatening small animals, damaging the soil and polluting beaches. Despite these crucial issues, recycling was meant to improve Tourism, create jobs and save foreign exchange in imports of drugs to fight cholera and malaria that can be linked to rubbish heaps.
The army created for this war was the Recycling Taskforce, a group of sixteen people
from the government, plastic manufacturers, water sachet producers and city
authorities. These people were given the task of encouraging creation of new recycling plants as
well as working with existing recyclers to expand their facilities. The goal was to begin by recycling plastic
waste into kitchen utensils, as well as pushing for legislation to promote the
use of recycled plastic in the manufacture of items such as dustbins and
gutters. The Recycling Taskforce hired a team of waste collectors and
supplied them with push-carts for house-to-house collection. Paid one US dollar for every fifty kilograms they collected, the waste would then be stored at one of ten depots
around Accra until the time came to recycle.
Furthermore, waste recycling companies from
South Africa and the Netherlands expressed interest in the project and media targeted children. There was a goal to create environmental clubs in schools, so as to increase awareness of the damage that littering can do, as well as to teach them about
recycling.
Because of this idea of a possible ban, some plastic producers did begin to help the government fund the project, though there was some resistance to the amount. The National Association of Sachet Water Producers, for example, found the monthly contribution of fifty thousand US dollars for clearing of plastic waste to be excessive; the association president stated that the authorities should not “target only the water producers" and that she would contribute half the requested amount. Another source of funding was also proposed to come from people who drop litter, showing that the water producers are not the only ones targeted. Local authorities having obtained legal backing to prosecute litter bugs, were able to make it that culprits face six months in jail or a twenty US dollar fine. Personally, I think this is fully acceptable, particularly in a country like Ghana. The reason for this is that since there is so much pollution in the form of littering in the country and since so many people cannot afford to pay any kind of fine, let alone twenty US dollars (which at times could amount to forty Ghana), this would greatly reduce pollution. It may take time since the police are not everywhere (and I do not think they should be), but change has to start somewhere.
Despite all of my comments, this article brings up an important point: change forced by the government and by policy can only go so far. When change comes from the grassroots, it disperses and becomes lasting change.
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