The collection and disposal of waste,
particularly solid waste, must improve if a reoccurrence of the June 3, 2015 disaster is to be avoided, the Executive Secretary to the
Environmental Services Providers Association, (ESPA), Ms Ama
Ofori-Antwi, has said.
Speaking at a meeting with the Chief of
Staff, Mr Julius Debrah, and other executive members of association, Ms
Ofori-Antwi stated that "if nothing is done to help us improve on waste
management, particularly in Accra, the June 3, 2015, disaster might
reoccur."
On June 3, last year, about 150 people died as a result
of a flood and fire disaster that occurred at the Kwame Nkrumah Circle
in Accra. The Odaw drain, which carries run-off water into the Atlantic
Ocean through the Korle Lagoon, overflowed its banks because it was
choked with garbage.
The executive members, including the First
Vice, Mr Stanley Owusu; a Consultant, Mr Ben Laryea, and a member, Nana
Ama Adobea, met Mr Debrah to deliberate on some of the challenges facing
members of the ESPA.
The ESPA is an umbrella body of waste
management companies in Ghana, with a membership of about 90 contractors
in the formal sector and over 4,000 in the informal sector.
Responsibility of government
Ms
Ofori-Antwi stated that sanitation was the responsibility of the
government, and it must, therefore, support the private sector, which
had assumed that role, to succeed in keeping the country's environment
clean.
She said members of the ESPA had in the past few years
carried out their mandate to the best of their abilities, which had
resulted in some parts of the city being clean.
"However, we have not been perfect and that is why we need the government to help us," she stated.
"The
bye-laws of the assemblies clearly state that they should provide
landfills and dumping sites but that is not the case. Currently, the
waste collectors are expected to even pay for dumping at the final
disposal sites," she added.
She said the fluctuation of the cedi
against the world's major currency, the dollar, was having a toll on the
finances of ESPA’s members, because the waste trucks and other
equipment needed for effective waste management operations were
imported.
Mr Laryea also observed that the waste management
sector was one of the few that faced a rigid price control regime, with
the assemblies determining how much a contractor should charge at the
end of the month, despite the fact that everything is imported at the
contractor's cost.
Support needed
Mr
Laryea said it was also in the interest of the government to support the
private sector to reduce the burden on the National Health Insurance
Scheme (NHIS) claims.
"Our work impacts on the health and
wellbeing of all those who live in Ghana, and money paid into the NHIS
could be reduced if sanitation improves," he stated.
Mr Stanley
Owusu, who is also the Chief Executive Officer of J. Stanley Owusu
Company Limited, recommended that the government should act as an
intermediary for the private sector to get access to loan facilities
from international banks, including the Exim Bank of India, Hungary Exim
Bank and European Union Bank, among others.
"It is envisaged that the interest rates from these banks are comparatively lower to those from local banks," he said.
He
also asked the government to, as a matter of urgency, waive tax on
imported waste equipment to enable the companies to procure new trucks
at reasonable cost to carry out their work.
Madam Adobea said the
government needed to completely take over the collection of refuse from
low income but densely populated areas such as Glefe, Chorkor and
Avenor, since contractors operating in such areas were unable to break
even. "Some of the residents in these communities cannot even pay 50
pesewas to a contractor at the end of the month," she stated. |
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