Zoomlion Introduces "The Bin Solution" To Mitigate Ghana's Waste Mananagement Challenges

The failsafe solution out of the sanitation challenges facing the major cities and towns in Ghana is what has largely been described as the ‘Bin Solution.’

Ghana like many West African countries is still battling with filth in its cities. Wherever you go, you are greeted by unkempt surroundings. In the capital, Accra things are worse.

From Kaneshie, Fadama, Chorkor, Friday Market, Nima, Agbogloshie, James Town, parts of Korle Gonno, Madina Market to Ashaiman the dirty surroundings is evident of a breakdown in sanitation standards.

The famous garden city Kumasi is not spared the scourge of the challenges as areas such as Aboabo Market, Kejetia Market, Asafo Market, Alaba business centre, parts of Kaase and the Kumasi Central Market are in the same league as their counterparts in Accra.

Tamale, too, has its fair share of the problem. Key areas affected include, parts of Chogu and Yapalsi, Sakasaka, Gumani and Gurugu among others are notoriously noted for unmanaged filth.

It is trite knowledge that waste generation nationally and domestically corresponds with population growths. And the influx of rural migrants in most of the major cities in the country has compounded the problem.

Considering the size of Ghana’s population estimated by the World Bank to be at 30million people in 2016 there is the need to reconsider the sanitation strategies and policies that were drafted some years past.

One can safely conclude, without erring, that waste generation, especially plastics, in urban areas are higher than that of the less developed areas. The migration issue explained supra is a case in point.

Over the years, government and private entities have tried to rescue the country from the clutches of poor sanitation but the success chalked has been marginal compared to the task. 

We all generate waste, including our president and ministers. This is normal because we interact with several materials in the course of the day and more especially because we need to eat. 

What should be of concern to us is how our country can manage its waste efficiently and effectively. Some countries have tackled theirs from the state perspective whilst others from the private sector angle.

Ghana has over the years adopted the mixed method in addressing the challenges but a majority of the job has been done by the private sector, with some considerable support from the government.

Fortunately, Ghana is one of the few countries in the world with good laws but the challenge has been the implementation. Many policies, laws and bye-laws have been enacted by Parliament and Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) have also promulgated several by- laws to regulate the environment among others. Bye-laws are not enforced by the state agencies but  done by the MMDAs. In the midst of all these laws, the situation remains the same.

Waste management experts Zoomlion Ghana Limited in collaboration with other members of the Environmental Services Providers Association (ESPA), MMDAs and  the Church of Pentecost are set to create the necessary awareness and distribute one million (1,000,000) waste bins of various sizes to households and individuals according to their waste generation needs across Ghana.  The exercise will commence as soon as household data are provided to the company.

To this effect, Zoomlion Ghana Ltd had secured a loan facility of Ten Million United States Dollars from Ecobank as a commitment to undertake the project and to help achieve President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s vision of making Ghana a clean country.  This was revealed by Executive Chairman of the Jospong Group of Companies (JGC), Dr. Joseph Siaw Agyepong at a stakeholder meeting in Accra.

Dr. Agyepong rightly cited countries such as Singapore, Dubai, Mauritius and Kigali which were once in the same state as Ghana but resolved to change their fortune. And they did. If it was possible for them, the business guru said Ghana could be like them.

He suggested the “THE BIN SOLUTION” as a way of getting out of the challenges. He asked the MMDAs ‘where will refuse go if they are not in the bin?’ and their reply was instantaneous. “The gutters,” went the chorus.

If we do not make available bins for the generation and collection of waste, it would find itself in our open drainage, behind houses and in our gardens. Tackling filth demands a shared responsibility and we all need to be of the same mind to achieve this.

Benefits of Bins in the words of Dr Agyepong

Bin as Job Creation Avenue:

It is obvious that in distributing a million bins, some hundreds of youths would be engaged in the household registration and distribution processes, some would drive, others would write and some would lift them at the various MMDAs. Even after distribution, waste management services would be needed to do the lifting of waste on daily basis which also attracts some work activity.

Bin will save our Citizens from Communicable Diseases:

In a clean environment people will not be infested with communicable diseases and would be able to continue to undertake their daily economic activities unlike the case in the filthy communities. The bin will therefore promote economic growth of the nation.

Bin will save the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) from collapse:

In a clean environment, you will find only healthy people and when people are healthy, they will not seek medical attention at a cost to the NHIS. Therefore, the scheme will make good savings as a result since it would now be used by a few people suffering from unrelated diseases such as malaria, cholera, typhoid and diarrhoea which are mostly related to unhygienic environment conditions.