This post continues on from the earlier one: Rubbish Rubbish Everywhere, Ghana’s on the Brink post a couple of days ago.
A stroll along any road in virtually any city or village in Ghana invites ugly scenes: plastic rubbish virtually everywhere. It’s one of the major complaints tourists have about traveling in Ghana.
I feel like plastic bags have become a status symbol here in Ghana. I’ll explain. It’s like a “gift with purchase” almost. As in, you purchased a bottle of water, here’s your free plastic bag with that. People are proud to carry handfuls of black plastic bags as though it’s a sign of progress like some small middle-developing nations purchase tiny cars to clog up the already crowded streets and emit yet more CO2 into the choking atmosphere.
When we shop in the market, we take our huge Shop Rite heavy duty bag and pile fruits and vegetables on top of each other inside. Despite protestations and pointing into our bag to demonstrate that we don’t use “rubbers,” traders don’t listen.
“Here’s a plastic bag anyway,” they seem to say, peeling off a plastic bag and handing it to us after we place the fruit in our big bag with all the other items.
We have to forcefully refuse this offer everywhere we go. In the pharmacy we’re offered a plastic bag with our little tiny box of medicine. In the store we’re offered a plastic bag with a small tin of milk.
And Ghanaians complain about being poor. Imagine how much money would be saved if no one handed out black plastic bags for a month. There’s a cost none of us needs when we buy food. Imagine the savings. If we’re paying 5 pesewas a plastic bag, say, and we consume one or two a day, that’s a saving of 10 pesewas a day. Now, where I live, that’s a lot of money for some folks. Apply that across the country and there is a whole lot of money that can be spent on food instead of plastic.
I have never seen anyone refuse a plastic bag. I remember as a kid the same thing in Australia. No one thought twice about taking a plastic bag for a packet of bread that was already packaged in plastic. That mentality changed with time and education. The same will have to happen here if, and this is the big if, the country values its environment.
That’s the question, though. Does anyone in Ghana really value their environment?
As I wrote in the first post, ‘While the Ugandan Government banned plastic bags in 2007, in Ghana pure water sales provide considerable employment and it is argued “the economic implications of a ban would just be too significant.”’
That is part of the problem. Most people cannot get access to clean drinking water. You risk all sorts of diseases by drinking straight from the tap. The alternative is plastic bottles, which are too expensive for most people and possibly even worse for the environment. So, until we can get access to clean drinking water, “pure water” it will have to be. (How pure it actually is, is anyone’s guess.)
This would not be the huge problem it is if these bags were taken home and recycled, or put in rubbish bins and recycled. One of these options has to become reality. If not, the plastic that someone throws away today will still be in the ground or water when the babies born this year, in 2010, go to university in 2030.
Pure water plastic bags will be around for 20 years, they don’t ever truly break down. And 40,000 of them are discarded every day in Accra central, alone. You can imagine the impact to the soil, rivers and water catchments across all of Ghana. God knows what type of poisons being leeched from plastic rubbish enter the water ways.
Fortunately, there are some rubbish collection services in Ghana, like Zoomlion, but they alone cannot cope with the problem.
The solution lies with each person not littering. And in either recycling or phasing out the use of plastic bags altogether. That’s the long-term solution. The Ugandan example.
Meanwhile, a lot of small and large NGOs have begun turning this rubbish into creative products. You can find them at Trashy Bags in Accra, a popular haunt for travelers and expats. They’ve been doing this for years now, and have become very good at it. All those Fan Yogo and Fan Ice wrappers, as well as pure water and juice wrappers, are sewn into bags and purses that make great personal gifts when you’re returning home, or for you yourself during your stay in Ghana.
Here is a link to Trashy Bags where you can browse products and get directions to their Accra show room. Image by Trashy Bags.
Ghana Plastic image by Terence.
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Hi Gayle,
I’m enjoying following your blog. We had a trip to Uganda and Rwanda earlier this year and Rwanda has also banned plastic bags … in fact Rwanda is the cleanest African country I’ve visited … there was no rubbish anywhere and they take the plastic bag ban very seriously including searching bags upon arrival at the airport and land borders.Cheers, Kym
Hi Kym,
Thanks so much for your comment. We truly hope the government here takes action to ban them too. Once you start working with plastic bags you really begin to see how bad the problem is. It’s all you can see sometimes! But we read a quote from a politician here who said that selling pure water gives employment to an estimated 40,000 people and the economic implications of stopping pure water production were too great. Not good for Ghana’s environment. We feel that at least we can use as many of them as possible in the mean time. 9000 and counting this month. It’s reassuring to know that some African governments do take it seriously. Thank you,
Gayle.
Banning the pure water sachets is not necessary and would not be in the interest of Ghana. It will only throw more people out of job and deny a significant proportion of Ghanaians access to a ‘clean’ source of drinking water (especially in the three Northern Regions of Ghana)!
Ghana, through its universities and other institutions of higher learning, can learn from other Countries! This category of the waste stream is currently being diverted from landfil sites and utilised along with waste biomass etc, as chemical feedstock for the production of fuel (petrol, diesel, kerosene, syngas, etc),and as a source of chemical energy and carbon for iron and steelmaking!
This technology is simple and is not beyond our capabilities! Let’s change our ‘CANNOT DO ATTITUDE’ and task our scientists and engineers. Let’s place money where it is needed (SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH), for in the long run it will benefit all of us!
Thanks and regards,
James Dankwah
(UNSW, Kensington-Sydney, Australia)
Contact me if you need further discussion on this!
Hi James,
Hey, you’re writing from just “up the road” from my home. This is a brilliant comment and I believe a lot of readers will benefit from having your perspective here. I do agree about the clean drinking water in this part of Ghana too. I also fully agree with you on investing in scientific research in Ghana–well, establishing excellent R&D practices and then following through to innovative solutions to some of these problems. You’d think the proceeds from oil production would be ideal to invest in anything enviro-plastic related, but I wonder if that will happen. Let’s see.
Thank you again.
Gayle.