When those running a loss-making state enterprise, such as the Volta
Aluminium Company Limited (VALCO), ignore the environmental
consequences of the corporate decisions they make, those who question
their sense of judgement, for that reason, should not be accused of
being unfair critics.
VALCO was conceived at a time when the importance of preserving the
earth's biodiversity, and the benefits of the ecosystem services
provided by forests, were not as well understood as they currently
are.
If Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah had known what the world's scientific
community now knows about global climate change, preserving
biodiversity and the importance of forests, at the time the idea for
VALCO was conceived, he would definitely have asked its promoters to
look elsewhere, not to the Atewa Range, for bauxite supplies, in
their long-term planning - and made sure that the Atewa Range upland
evergreen rainforest, including the Atewa Forest Reserve, was preserved
for the benefit of future generations of the Ghanaian people (and the
rest of humankind).
President Nkrumah would have probably turned the Atewa Range into a
national park, and promoted tourism there, to provide the area with a
sustainable local economy - and ensured that all mining, logging and
hunting was banned completely from the area.
It is an outrage that in 21st century Ghana, on their own, the
unelected and over-paid management of a state-owned entity that is a
financial basket-case, can take far-reaching decisions, which could
cause irreparable harm to the natural environment - and negatively
impact the quality of life of millions of Ghanaians for decades to come.
At a time when global climate change is negatively impacting our nation,
the strange decision by the management of VALCO, to borrow money to
build a coal-fired power plant dependent on imported coal from South
Africa, is hard to fathom.
Are they not aware of the fact that no matter how advanced and
sophisticated the filters deployed to remove pollutants from the smoke
coming out of the chimneys of coal-fired power plants might be, by
their very nature, such power plants will always be major polluters
wherever in the world they are sited?
The question is: are VALCO's managers not aware of the harm that
coal-fired power plants in newly industrialised nations such as China,
are causing to the quality of air in cities like Beijing, one wonders?
If they insist on building their own power plant, why do VALCO's
management not opt to use a relatively cleaner fuel, such as natural
gas from Ghana's offshore oilfields, to power their proposed thermal
power plant - instead of importing coal from South Africa for that
purpose?
The truth of the matter, is that whatever VALCO manufactures in its
Tema factory, price-wise, those products can never be competitive
globally.
Products from ALCOA's aluminium plant in Iceland, for example, will
always be cheaper than VALCO's products - because of the availability
of cheap hydro-power for its Icelandic aluminium plant.
At a time of global climate change, those who want Ghana to have an
integrated aluminium industry, for strategic reasons, ought to rather
think in terms of an integrated sub-regional aluminium industry for
West Africa.
In that business model, Guinea could partner Ghana, and supply bauxite
for refining and smelting, by a VALCO that has its own gas-fired
power plant.
Had current scientific knowledge about climate change been available to
him in the 1960's, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah would never have
countenanced the destruction of the Atewa Range upland evergreen rain
forest, to mine its low-grade bauxite deposits.
That is why no one should use President Nkrumah's original vision of an
integrated aluminium industry for Ghana, as an excuse to use as a cloak
for the destruction of the Atewa Range upland evergreen rainforest, by
mining bauxite in it.
Any Ghanaian who is sincere, farsighted and thinks deeply enough,
cannot, but come to the conclusion that today, for basic survival and
quality-of-life reasons, any plans for an integrated aluminium industry
in Ghana, cannot possibly include bauxite mining (or mining of any sort
for that matter) in the Atewa Range.
VALCO's management must be more environmentally and socially responsible in this instance.
At a time of global warming, destroying the source of the headwaters of
three important river systems - the Densu, Birim and Ayensu - on which a
large part of southern urban Ghana, including Accra, the national
capital, depends for its drinking-water supply to mine bauxite, is
untenable and unthinkable.
It is a crime against humanity, in an age of global climate change, to
propose the destruction of one of only two upland evergreen
rainforests in our nation, which has been designated a Globally
Significant Biodiversity Area (GSBA), and is the source of the
headwaters of three major river systems that supply water for domestic
and industrial use, in scores of towns and cities across southern
Ghana - just to mine deposits of low-grade bauxite, which will be
exhausted in 50 years: and all for a mere US$17.5 billions over the
period (the amount Ghana would apparently earn from mining the area's
bauxite deposits itself - according to media reports attributed to
VALCO's deputy CEO).
It is inconceivable that anyone concerned about the survival of future
generations, would contemplate the destruction of an upland evergreen
rainforest, designated a Globally Significant Biodiversity Area, which
has evolved over millions of years, and could be the basis of a
thriving and sustainable eco-tourism industry, and the source of both
known and yet-to-be-discovered medicinal plants, yielding trillions of
dollars in revenues till the very end of time.
At all costs, VALCO's management must be prevented from embarking on a
course of action, which will end up condemning future generations of
Ghanaians to eking out a miserable living in an apocalyptic landscape -
akin to a hell-on-earth existence in a barren and moonscape-like
natural environment - were the Atewa Range to be destroyed by bauxite
mining.
For the sake of future generations, in addition to a complete ban on
hunting and logging in the area, no mining of any sort must be allowed
in the whole of the Atewa Range upland evergreen rainforest. A word to
the wise...
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment