Accra, Dec. 22, - Ghana is not ready to ban plastics now,
however the Government will come up with a Draft Zero Plastic Policy by the
middle of January, next year, to deal with plastic waste.
Professor Kwabena
Frimpong-Boateng, the Minister of Environment, Science, Technology and
Innovation, said there were many options to deal with plastic waste, which
would create jobs.
He said it was not possible to
outlaw it right now because a lot of people relied on plastics at the moment,
adding that upon introduction of the Policy, government would allow various
stakeholders to make inputs into it to ensure a holistic policy.
Prof. Frimpong-Boateng said this
at a media briefing in Accra on Friday, ahead of the Christmas festivities.
He said there had been a lot of
suggestions from many quarters that countries such as Rwanda, Cote d’Ivoire and
Burkina Faso had outlawed plastics so Ghana should do the same.
Prof. Frimpong-Boateng said: “In
this Ministry we are very careful not to act with pretence so we sit down and
think about issues very well before we take steps.
‘‘We don’t want to rush into
doing things. A lot of these countries have banned plastics, but there is
active smuggling into those countries, therefore we need to take collective
decision as a country that will benefit everybody’’.
Prof. Frimpong-Boateng stated
that currently what the country needed was to avoid indiscriminate littering of
the environment with plastic waste, which required change of attitudes by
Ghanaians.
He said something could be done
with courier bags by replacing them with cotton bags and recycling of plastics,
saying; ‘‘ I know two groups are involved in recycling of plastics into fuel,
for preparing bricks, and also turning plastics to replace bitumen, which can
be more durable’’.
The Minister entreated Ghanaians
to avoid excessive generation of waste and admonished those who would be using
the beaches for various activities during the Yuletide to avoid disposing
plastic waste into the ocean to safeguard marine life.
Prof. Frimpong-Boateng, who is
also the Chairperson of the Inter-Ministerial Taskforce against Illegal Mining,
commended the media and the Media Coalition against Illegal Mining for the
crucial roles they played this year in combating the menace of illegal
small-scale mining, also known as ‘‘galamsey’’.
He said the fight against illegal
mining this year had been very successful in view of the stringent measures
outlined by the Government.
He mentioned the moratorium on
all operations of small-scale mining and deployment of Operation Vanguard to
enforce the ban in the Western, Eastern and Ashanti regions, as well as the
arrest and ongoing prosecution of some illegal miners as some of the successes
chalked so far.
The Minister said government
would enter the next phase of the fight against illegal mining by regularising
the activities of artisanal small-scale miners, examine the mining communities
affected by mercury pollution and take further steps to remedy the
environmental pollution and degradation of the vegetation.
He said government would
undertake baseline studies on mining communities affected by illegal mining,
which would inform government’s decisions.
GNA

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