Govt
re-engineering waste management with CLI, Visionscape’s Epe Eco Park, says
commissioner
Lately,
there has been the gradual return of garbage heaps in Lagos metropolis, wh
ich
has been a source of worry to many residents of the state. In spite of the
massive infrastructural renewal the state government is embarking to change the
city’s landscape, heaps of refuse on roadsides, bus-stops, markets and highways
have remain a blot on the state.
This is
compounded by the state’s new waste management initiatives, primed at
re-engineering the challenge of waste to make the city clean in the face of
rapid urbanization. The resurgence of waste has been attributed to the early
hitches been experienced in the new waste management policy of the state
government, encapsulated in the Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI).
Lagos
residents have expressed shock at the rate mounds of filth have resurfaced in
their areas overnight. Akomolafe Taiwo, who resides in Pen Cinema area, said:
“The heaps of refuse and stench that engulf the air every morning as we wake up
on a daily basis is terrible. The question is who is generating these wastes
overnight? The government should do something about it to avert outbreak of
epidemic.”
At Otto
Wharf area in Apapa, refuse dumps are taking some section of the road. Mr.
Okunade Qundus Adiola, said it has worsened in the last one month since the PSP
operators stopped working ahead of the takeoff of the state’s new model.
Robson
Moses, a resident of Iyana Ipaja, also said the environment has not been this
dirty since he moved into the area five years ago.
However, the
state government has assured residents that it will soon be a fading history.
Under the CLI arrangement, apart from the 600 brand new compactors that would
be used to collect waste, 900,000 electronically tracked bins would be provided
in homes across the state, while wastes generated by the commercial sector
would be handled by licensed private sector participants.
Meanwhile,
efforts of the state at ensuring proper management of waste has started
yielding results with the commencement of work at the Visionscape’s Eco Park in
Epe. As one of the platforms designed to package the over 13,000 tonnes of
waste daily generated in Lagos, said to be the largest in the world, the
construction of West Africa’s premier landfill in Epe, is in tandem with the
pace setting nature of the megacity, aggregating contemporary strategies of
turning waste to wealth.
The
landfill, which is the most ambitious part of the CLI, will save the city the
horror, which current dumpsites in Olusosun, Igando and other areas constitute.
According to
an environmentalist, Jimoh Akinsola, the closure of these dumpsites will enable
the state to convert the eyesores to better uses. For instance, the Olusosun
site is being proposed as location for a golf course, which will enhance the
aesthetics of the entrance to Lagos.
The Epe Eco
park, according to Visionscape, is designed to encapsulate all the facilities
listed above and when operational in the next few weeks, will facilitate world
class waste collection and management, waste water management, preserve the
environment and contribute to the Lagos State power generation programme.
According to
Visionscape, modern equipment and machinery fortified with geographical
information system (GIS) facilities is one the features of the Epe landfill.
The
Commissioner for the Environment, Dr. Babatunde Adejare, said retrofitting of
the site to a worldclass standard was part of the new waste management policy
of the state government initiated by Governor Ambode’s administration.
He stressed
that the new initiative, which would be a clear departure from the old system
of waste management, is geared towards engendering the protection of the
health, social living standard of the people and the environment in general.
“The Epe
Landfill is a modern site of first class engineering innovation, designed to
meet modern day waste management, where what had hitherto characterized our
operations will be eliminated. The location of the site, which is more than
five kilometres to the main township of Epe, makes it more environmentally
friendly,” he said.
Aside the
waste collection and disposal component of the project, there is also waste to
energy component which will form part of the plan of the state government to
generate 3,000 MegaWatt of power within the next three to five years.
0 Comments