“In the midst of the catastrophic pollution of the
environment by humans, we have chosen to take a stand for and with the
environment against humans” – Gideon Marcel
If
you are terrified by the sight of the disgusting pile of waste in the
gutters, on the streets and inside every nook and cranny of Accra, then
you probably don’t live in Ghana. The country has a severe environmental
crisis and featuring prominently on that list is sanitation.
When
we talk about sanitation in Ghana, the argument is mostly political,
social and cultural (attitudinal), but to really grasp the seriousness
of the mess, you have to do a simple math to create a powerful story.
The Ghana Youth Environmental Movement (GYEM) is building a generation
wide movement of young people to solve the environmental crisis in
Ghana, and we have done a little math to tell the scale of the
sanitation problem and offer a sustainable solution once and for all.
Our simple math has 3 numbers:
1. 2,500 tons
This
is the amount of waste that is generated in Accra per day. Out of this
number, 2,200 tons is collected and dumped at landfills, the remaining
300 tons find their way into open drains, streets, etc. Multiplying the
amount of waste land filled by 365 days gives the total amount of waste
Accra produces per year as 803,000 tons.
2. 10 Megawatts (MW)
Officials
of the Accra Compost & Recycling Plant (ACRP), has indicated to the
government that it is possible to use appropriate technology to produce
10MW of electricity out of 1,000 tons of waste per day. This amount of
energy can power several thousands of households. To put this figure
into perspective, two (2) waste-to-energy plants or a single one with
combined capacity, with appropriate technology can swallow up all the
waste Accra city produces in a day and still lack enough waste to power
the plants. Simply put, we would run out of waste in the city.
Sweden
runs the most effective and efficient waste management system in the
world. The garbage generates 20% of the country’s district heating and
provides electricity to 250,000 homes. “The only problem with the Sweden
Waste Management system is that it is too successful”. The waste
Sweden produces is just not enough that they import 800,000 tons of
waste from their neighbors Norway to keep the plants running. The amount
they import is nearly equivalent to the amount of waste Accra produces
in a whole year.
3. US$ 150m
Waste-energy
experts in Ghana indicate that this is roughly the amount of money that
can fund the operation of a waste-energy plant with appropriate
technology to produce 10MW- 12MW per hour using between 1,000-1,500 tons
of municipal solid waste per day. These figures are not perfect but are
highly reliable.
So why hasn’t it been done? The excuse
the government and municipal waste management officials say is that
there is no budget and funds for this. We at Ghana Youth Environmental
Movement are saying that we can find that money through a Price for
Pollution. (Read about our Price for Pollution solutions here-http://gideoncommey.blogspot.com/2013/01/what-is-price-for-pollution-why-you.html).
We
just need the political will to do that. Yes, we can raise that money
over here in Ghana. The solution is a Price for Pollution and it holds
the keys to a green renewable future.
Every rapid
transformation change requires a movement to drive it, our movement has
just arrived and there’s only one thing on our mind – environmental
power shift in Ghana.
Gideon Marcel (Campaigns Team, Ghana Youth Environmental Movement).
PLEASE SHARE on Facebook and tweet a copy from here (http://gideoncommey.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-accra-waste-math.html) with hashtag #Ghwastemath
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