For those who earnestly want to be millionaires, Lagos is the
preferred destination. Many residents of the city may find this strange
to believe.
But again, the message has been handed out:
You can become a millionaire easily just by packing waste! Indeed, it’s
now easy to become very rich by merely gathering pure water sachets,
plastic bottles and other ‘useless’ items.
Those items that many in
Lagos ignorantly cast aside are increasingly becoming money-spinners to
many of the city’s folks.
The Lagos State Waste Management
Authority (LAWMA) is dishing out cool cash to many who now gather waste
at streets corners, accumulate them and bring them forth for sale. Daily
Sun gathered that this thriving business has been on for quite a while
without many knowing it. Those who were actively involved in it were
being passed off as unserious scavengers.
But not anymore, as many
are now going into the business. This came to the open recently when
the Department of Geography, University of Lagos, and LAWMA collaborated
to stage a national conference on recycling, with the theme, Recycling:
A Succour to Climate Change.
Present on that day was the Head of
Department of Geography, Professor Samuel Iyiola Oni, who was the
event’s convener. Also there was Mrs. A A Jijoho-Ogun, LAWMA’s General
Manager, Administration, who represented the Managing Director, Mr. Ola
Oresanya.
There was also Mrs. Juliana Guwan, Director, Marine
Environment of Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety (NIMASA), who
represented the, Director General, Zikade Patrick Akpobolokemi. Both
women presented papers on the theme of the conference. One Professor
Taiwo represented the Lagos State Transport Authority (LAMATA), just as
there were representations from aviation and other sectors of the
economy. Various agencies and private individuals with strong interest
in the environment were in attendance.
And
from the UNILAG community, there were Professors L.O. Oyekunle, HOD,
Chemical Engineering; Nwokoma, Dean of Social Sciences; Nwachukwu, Dean
of Sciences; Solomon Akinboye, HOD, Political Science, Ademola Omojola;
Dr. Olayinka Coker of the health services and many more. Apart from the
students of the institution, primary and secondary school students, who
were interested in the environment also attended. The event held at
Julius Berger Hall in the institution.
Various speakers jolted
everyone with the telling truth that every passing day, emerging facts
show that humans, more than ever before, are under severe threat of the
environment.
The environment is blazing with anger because humans
have continued to violate it. Many people keep hurting the earth without
knowing how. Such people are unfazed that, the motor tyres, the bush
and the wastes they burn, those vehicles speeding down the highways,
leaving thick, black smoke on their trail are slowly and steadily
eroding a blanket which shields the fury of the sun from the earth.
Consequently,
the earth is increasingly being heated up. Huge ice sheets, which for
ages were lying at the north and south poles, are now melting and
releasing huge volumes of water into the oceans.
The conference
noted that experts are shouting themselves hoax, warning that every bad
environmental practice has been contributing to global warming and
everyone needs to work hard to save the earth.
But unfortunately,
only few people are listening. The other clear message was that those
sachets of pure water and other refuse that many Nigerians gleefully
dump indiscriminately, especially in the urban areas, all have huge
potentials to harm. Both the Federal and state governments have been
warning that such wastes block drainage channels. And once the rains
come down pouring in heavy sheets, flood waters are obstructed by the
accumulated rubbish, leaving everyone and every property at risk. In
Lagos and other urban communities in the country for instance, the
impacts of flood in the recent past were quite devastating.
So, in
a move to stave off this ugly development, Lagos State government
through LAWMA launched its Buy-Back Project. Men, women and children are
all in it. In this project, LAWMA buys one kilogramme of nylon bags for
N30, one kilogramme of papers for N5 while one kilogramme of plastic
bottles goes for N25. Many are scrambling to key into the business. Mrs
Jijoho-Ogun disclosed that LAWMA wanted many more people to join the
emerging trade by either going to their offices or calling their
toll-free lines for inquiry. “With this, we are working for a cleaner
environment,” she said.
“We are encouraging more people in various
communities to join so that we can leave the city free of waste. We are
not asking our distinguished professors to leave their academics and
join the Buy-Back Project, but they can contributing in various ways to
help us realise this,” she added. She also told the audience what LAWMA
had been doing and the strategies it had been employing to realise a
better Lagos.
According to her, some organisations in Lagos
including LAWMA, have been buying and recycling some of the rubbish
generated in the city to make nylon plastic bags and other products and
urged residents to patronise the PSP operators within their areas. In
her presentation, Mrs Guwan described recycling as “the process of
converting waste or discarded materials into new usable products for the
benefit of humanity.”
She noted that the process could reduce
environmental degradation through air, water and land pollution, adding
that “it has been identified as a modern waste reduction strategy across
the globe”. She recalled that long before now, the slogan was “waste to
waste, but now it is waste to wealth.”
While recounting the
strategies her agency had been using to combat climate change, she said
recycling was important and urged Nigerians to endeavour to put their
waste in the right places for proper disposal. Dr Coker recalled that
anytime waste was left in the open, it decomposes and emits methane
gases, carbon dioxide and carbon mono oxide. She said the impact of
global warming leaves everyone with medical condition such as rashes,
stoke as well as psychological problems.
Speaker after speaker,
including Professor Taiwo Oyekunle commended the Department of Geography
for the initiative, stating that the event was engaging as it was
illuminating.
In his response, Professor Oni recalled that the
consequences of climate change had been unprecedented in recent times on
the Nigerian society, hence the move to consider ways to mitigate the
dangers of the phenomenon. Dr Emmanuel Ege, a lecturer in the department
of Geography told Daily Sun that the conference “was in line with
global best practices whereby universities are involved in
investigations into things that have to do with climate change and
recycling is one of them,” adding that it was the responsibility of
university to show the way through research and investigations.
He
said the conference was simply timely. He regretted that waste was
still indiscriminately being dumped in the urban areas and said the
conference would come up with recommendations that would define the
phenomenon in the university and the country.

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