E-waste crisis: NGO calls for more enlightenment in Nigeria

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Electronic waste export to Nigeria...Olusosum dump site, Lagos. Goverment run by the agancy Lagos Waste Management Authority ( LAWMA ). One of 6 sites taking in general waste from all over Lagos. E-waste is not allowed on site, but some does appear from the gerneral waste collected all over Lagos. Scavengers,- people, are making a living out of shfting through the rubbish and selling their collections for recycling..Some of the scavengers live on site, too poor to pay for accommodation any where else. ..The shipment - TV-set originally delivered to municipality-run collecting point in UK for discarded electronic products - was tracked and monitored by Greenpeace using a combination of GPS (Global Positioning System using satellites), GSM (positioning using data from mobile networks to triangulate approximate positions) and an onboard radiofrequency transmitter (used for making triangulations in combination with handheld directional receivers used by team on ground) is placed inside the TV-set. The TV arrived in Lagos in container no 4629416.

E-Waste Relief Foundation, a Non Governmental Organisation,  has canvassed for greater advocacy on the dangers  posed by electronic-waste to the environment .

The President of the Foundation, Mr Ifeanyi Ochonogor, who made the call at the inaugural meeting of the organisation‘s Board of Trustees (BoT)  on Wednesday in Lagos, warned that the threat of e-waste to the environment must be tackled urgently.

Ochonogor said that the foundation was conceived with the objective of   ensuring  safe disposal of electronic-waste  in Nigeria and the West Africa  sub-region.

“Nigeria alone generates about 1.1million tonnes of e-waste annually.

“ Therefore, it is only through sensitising the people and training the informal handlers of e-waste on standards of operation  that Nigeria can successfully tackle the issue.

“There is a great need for a foundation driven by passion to aid in solving the e-waste problems within the country and beyond.

“We are charged with the task of educating people on the dangers of improper e-waste management  as well as enlightening them on the right solutions that are available to stop the crisis at hand.

“It is in making people understand the threat we face that they saw reasons to join  us in the process of putting an end to the e-waste challenges that beset us,” Ochonogor said.

Ochonogor  said that a recent report published by the United Nations  forecasts that global electronic waste would  likely  increase to 50 million metric tonnes in 2018. (NAN)

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