Author's note: This was written on 12/1/2013. It is being posted today because I was unable to do so on the day.
The recent public outcry over the ghastly odour emanating from the
Achimota landfill site for the dumping of household and industrial waste
generated in the city of Accra, illustrates perfectly the huge Nimby
(not in my back yard) problem facing local authorities nationwide,
over the siting of landfill sites.
For many city residents in Accra - and elsewhere in urban Ghana -
landfill sites are usually out of sight: and therefore out of mind.
It is usually those who live near them in places like Achimota, Oblogo
and Gbawe, who have to worry about the health implications of being
near them.
Yet, landfill sites pose a long-term health risk to all Ghanaians -
because the leaking of toxic substances into the soil eventually
contaminates the water-table.
Simply put, landfill sites in Ghana - which are not properly supervised
in a scientific sense by local authorities - are a real and present
danger: health-wise and environmentally.
The fact of the matter, is that local authorities simply lack the
resources - trained expertise and the wherewithal - to supervise them
effectively.
Luckily, however, Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDA)
are moving closer to being able to raise money for projects
independently, by being allowed to float municipal bonds.
That will be possible when a new law for that purpose is finally passed
sometime this year. It will be a real boon for Ghana's cash-strapped
MMDA's.
If our ruling elites do some lateral thinking, the new law should
present them with an opportunity for a more creative approach to
dealing with waste disposal in Ghana.
In that regard, one humbly suggests that the next Minister of Local
Government and Rural Development, together with a number of Chief
Executives of key MMDA's from around the country, undertake a
working-trip to Denmark, to take a look at their modern
waste-to-energy plants - and see how they operate and manage them.
Obtaining finance through the floating of municipal bonds to build
waste-to-energy plants, makes financial sense for Ghana's MMDA's -
which can generate revenue from selling some of the power generated by
their waste-to-energy plants to the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG).
A long-term off-take agreement to supply power to the ECG will reassure
buyers of those bonds - as a steady cash flow for those stand-alone
projects will be guaranteed.
The building of those waste-to-energy plants could be attractive
private-public partnership opportunities for some in the Ghanaian
diaspora too, perhaps.
Switching from landfill sites to waste-to-energy plants as a means of
waste disposal in Ghana, will also abate the occurrence of incidents of
egregious examples of local pollution - such as the noxious smell that
those living near landfill sites in places like Achimota sometimes
have to contend with on a daily basis.
It will definitely be a welcome relief to all when a majority of landfill sites around Ghana are closed for good.
As it happens, compared to conventional incinerators, today's
cutting-edge waste-to-energy plants, such as those in use in Denmark,
are a great deal cleaner environmentally.
They are equipped with multiple filters to catch pollutants ranging
from dioxin to mercury - that only ten years ago would have been
released into the air from the chimneys of such renewable energy
plants.
There will also be less greenhouse gas emissions, such as the carbon
dioxide and methane generated by landfill sites in Ghana, when we
switch to waste-to-energy plants - and finally close down most of the
landfill sites around the country.
By grouping together, MMDA's in all the ten regions of Ghana can
generate the minimum tonnage of household and industrial waste required
daily, to feed waste-to-energy plants that they can also jointly own.
Small and medium-sized modern waste-to-energy plants such as some of
those in use in Denmark, Germany and Holland are definitely a viable
and sustainable alternative to landfill sites for the disposal of
household and industrial waste in Ghana. A word to the wise.
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Email: peakofi.thompson@gmail.com
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