Accra, Nov. 29, – Hajia Alima Mahama, the Minister of Local
Government and Rural Development, has been appointment as a member of the
Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves Leadership Council.
President Nana Addo Dankwa
Akufo-Addo was appointed by the UN Secretary General as one of the co-chairs of
the Eminent Persons on the Advocacy Group on Sustainable Development Goals.
This placed Ghana in a special
position to provide leadership on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
including leadership for the Clean Cooking Agenda, which is clearly reflected
in 10 out of the 17 SDGs.
At a ceremony to announce her
appointment, Hajia Mahama reiterated the need to adopt and have access to
affordable, clean sources of energy for everyday life as a sure way to
improving public health and safety.
It would also help mitigate
climate change and potentially attract investment and job creation.
Hajia Mahama said the United
Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), (Agenda 2030) was inter-linked
with the objectives of the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves and provided a
unique opportunity for fast-tracking development growth, improved service
delivery and industrialisation.
She said there was a growing
enthusiasm and vibrancy in the clean cooking sector of Ghana, which was largely
driven by active civil society organisations, private entrepreneurs and
government policy.
Hajia Mahama said the Government
was collaborating with stakeholders to sensitise the public and carry out
further research on the project.
She said the World Health
Organisation estimated that about three billion people in the developing world
were exposed to smoke from traditional cookstoves and open fires, which caused
nearly four million premature deaths each year, including 17,000 deaths in
Ghana.
The Minister said women and young
children were the most vulnerable and most affected, with more than 2,200
children in Ghana dying every year because of acute lower respiratory
infections caused by smoke from open fires.
That, she said, was the reason
the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves was advocating the use of clean, safe,
and efficient cookstoves and clean fuels to drastically reduce fuel consumption
and exposure to harmful smoke.
Hajia Mahama said cookstoves
contributed positively to good health, unpolluted environment, prolonged
livelihoods and better chances for achieving the SDGs.
She expressed her determination
to support and promote the use of cookstoves and fuels as the preferred energy
in the fuel sector, and ensure that local authorities created the enabling
environment to promoting investment in cookstoves.
This, she said, could be linked
to the One District One Factory programme and support metropolitan, municipal
and district assemblies to construct kitchens fitted with clean cookstoves for
the School Feeding Programme.
“I would also encourage
Inter-sectorial and agency collaboration and partnership to create a
sustainable and thriving market for clean cooking fuels and technology, broaden
the scope of technology transfer through the manufacturing of fuel (wood,
sawdust and agricultural waste) into briquettes and pellets to meet standards
for the export market and enhance the collaboration of government, civil
society and entrepreneurs in this sector.”
Hajia Mahama said the Government
was embarking on processes leading to a transformation of the economy through
industrialisation including the promotion of the One District One Factory
Policy.
It was government’s keen
expectation that districts endowed with resources for cookstoves and clean
fuels could woo investors into the sector, she said.
She said an effective mechanism
for the implementation of this laudable project would be to incorporate it into
district centres for commerce, agriculture, and technology that would
coordinate and facilitate investment opportunities in the manufacturing of
cookstoves and fuels.
Mr Kwesi Sarpong, the Global
Alliance Clean CookStoves Regional Representative, said the exposure to smoke
by the use of traditional cookstoves, the primary means of cooking for nearly
three billion people in the developing world, was high.
He said more than 75 per cent of
Ghana’s population relied on solid fuels for their household cooking needs and
that the reliance on biomass increased pressure on local natural resources,
leading to environmental degradation.
GNA

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