Author's note: This piece was written on 21/7/2013. It is being being posted today, because I was unable to do so on the day.Please read on:
It is so sad that it took so long for the authorities to clamp down on
the wealthy syndicates behind most of the illegal gold mining and
illegal logging in Ghana.
It is to the eternal credit of President Mahama that when he became
Ghana's leader, he decided to act decisively, to end the destruction of
the natural environment in vast swathes of the Ghanaian countryside,
resulting from the activities of illegal gold miners across Ghana.
The poisoning of soils, rivers and the contamination of underground
water reservoirs with cyanide and mercury, poses a long-term risk to
public health.
For that reason, the inter-ministerial task force formed to halt the
activities of illegal gold miners, ought to consider how the
soil-decontaminating properties of biochar and vertiver grass could be
harnessed to repair some of the widespread environmental degradation
caused by illegal gold miners.
Repairing the harm caused by illegal gold mining could actually provide employment for the youth in rural Ghana.
Co-operatives could be formed by the inhabitants of areas affected by
the operations of small-scale gold miners - to which such work could be
outsourced: and paid for from the reclamation bond that gold mining
companies are supposed to pay to regulators, as a guarantee that their
exhausted concessions will be rehabilitated.
Luckily for our nation, research is being conducted on biochar at the
University of Ghana, by a team led by Dr. Eric Kwesinartey.
Perhaps the international NGO Pro-Natura could help organise this
important task in rural areas polluted and degraded by small-scale gold
mining. It is headed in Ghana by Professor Anna Barnes of the University
of Ghana.
One hopes that the dynamic minister for lands and natural resources, the
Hon. Alhaji Inusah Fuseini, and the senior public officials who advise
him, will hold discussions with Professor Anna Barnes and Dr.
Kwesinartey to find a way in which Pro Natura could assist the Rural
Enterprises Project to help unemployed rural youth to set up
co-operatives and train them to produce biochar and vertiver grass to
repair the harm caused by gold mining to the natural environment across
rural Ghana.
Tel: 027 745 3109.
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