Agbogbloshie
Suburb near Accra, Ghana, known for its e-waste dump issues From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Suburb near Accra, Ghana, known for its e-waste dump issues From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Agbogbloshie was the nickname of a commercial district on the Korle Lagoon of the Odaw River, near the center of Accra, Ghana's capital city in the Greater Accra region, before it was demolished by the Ghanian government in 2021.[1] Near the slum called "Old Fadama", the Agbogbloshie site became known as a destination for externally generated automobile and electronic scrap collected from mostly the western world. It was a center of a legal and illegal exportation network for the environmental dumping of electronic waste (e-waste) from industrialized nations. The Basel Action Network, a charitable non-governmental organization based in Seattle, has referred to Agbogbloshie as a "digital dumping ground", where millions of tons of e-waste were processed each year.[2]
Agbogbloshie | |
---|---|
Town | |
Location of Agbogbloshie, Ghana in Greater Accra Region | |
Coordinates: 05°32′42.0″N 00°13′30″W | |
Country | Ghana |
Region | Greater Accra Region |
District | Korle-Klottey Municipal District |
Time zone | UTC0 (GMT) |
The most exhaustive study of the trade in used electronics in Nigeria, funded by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Basel Convention, revealed that, out of 540,000 tonnes of informally processed waste electronics, 52% of the material was recovered.[3]
According to statistics from the World Bank, in large cities like Accra and Lagos the majority of households have owned televisions and computers for decades.[4] The 2012 UN Report "Where are WEEE in Africa" (WEEE meaning Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) disclosed that the majority of used electronic equipment in African dumps had not been recently imported as scrap, but had originated from those African cities.[5]
Agbogbloshie is situated on the banks of the Korle Lagoon, northwest of Accra's Central Business District.[6][7] Roughly 40,000 Ghanaians inhabited the area, most of whom were migrants from rural areas.[8][6] Due to its harsh living conditions and rampant crime, the area was nicknamed "Sodom and Gomorrah".[9]
The Basel Convention prevents the transfrontier shipment of hazardous waste from developed to less developed countries. However, under Annex Ix, B1110, the Convention specifically allows export for reuse and repair. While numerous international press reports have made reference to allegations that the majority of exports to Ghana are dumped, research by the US International Trade Commission found little evidence of unprocessed e-waste being shipped to Africa from the United States.[10]
Whether domestically generated by residents of Ghana or imported, concern remained over the methods of waste processing — especially burning — which release toxic chemicals into the air, land and water. Exposure is especially hazardous to children, because those toxins are known to inhibit the development of the reproductive system, the nervous system and, especially, the brain. Concerns about human health and the environment of Agbogbloshie continue to be raised because the area remains heavily polluted.[6][11][12]
In the 2000s, the Ghanaian government, with new funding and loans, implemented the Korle Lagoon Ecological Restoration Project (KLERP), an environmental remediation and restoration project that was designed to deal with the pollution problem by dredging the lagoon and Odaw canal to improve drainage and the outfall into the ocean.[13]
In the 1960s, the slum area of Agbogbloshie was a wetland. As the city of Accra urbanized, a ghetto grew, referred to as Old Fadama or Ayaalolo.[8][2] During the 1980s, the ghetto was a place of shelter for refugees from the Konkomba-Nanumba war.[2] In the late 1990s, newly available electricity from the Akosombo Dam led to increased local demand for electric and electronic appliances. Critics claim that caused an imbalanced shift.[8]
The electricity from the Akosombo dam increased demand for functional second-hand televisions and computers, which were imported from the West by Africa's technology sector, to help "bridge the digital divide". Ghanaians welcomed the donations because the computers cost one-tenth the price of a new one. The Basel Action Network circulated a claim in 2008 that as many as 75 percent of the second-hand electronic equipment sent to Africa could not be reused and ended up in landfills.[8][14]
The BAN allegation was slightly different from its 2002 claim of 80% waste,[15] which became one of the most cited references in academic journals, though no documentation or peer reviewed source documentation was made available.[16] In 2013, BAN denied ever making the claim, or ever stating any statistic for African imports.
The local economy of Agbogbloshie is based on an onion market serving immigrants to Accra from the greater Tamale Region (Dagbani) in the north. Unemployed immigrants turned to scrap metal collection, including auto scrap, to supplement incomes. Electronic scrap processing is a fairly small activity at the market. The claim that "hundreds of millions of tons of electronic waste are imported to the area each year",[2] as reported by several news sources, is considered by most experts to be utterly ridiculous and preposterous[citation needed]. However, there is evidence that every month, an estimated 300 to 600 40-foot-long containers of e-waste shipments reach the ports of Ghana.[17]
It is not clear if the United States is[citation needed] the leading exporter of e-waste to Ghana, although imports arrive from other countries such as France, Germany, Korea, Switzerland and the Netherlands.[11][14] Multinational brands such as Philips, Canon, Dell, Microsoft, Nokia, Siemens and Sony are commonly found throughout the waste.[11] According to the E-Waste Assessment Studies, "Refurbishing of EEE [electrical and electronic equipment] and the sales of used EEE is an important economic sector (e.g. Alaba market in Lagos). It is a well-organized and a dynamic sector that holds the potential for further industrial development. Indirectly, the sector has another important economic role, as it supplies low and middle income households with affordable ICT equipment and other EEE. In the view of the sector's positive socio-economic performance, all policy measures aiming to improve e-waste management in Nigeria should refrain from undifferentiated banning of second-hand imports and refurbishing activities and strive for a co-operative approach by including the market and sector associations."[3]
Followers of BAN have alleged that non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are adding to the waste when excess electronics are donated with the intention of helping scholarly institutions.[18] They claim, based on the 75%-80% orphaned waste statistic, that exporters must have found numerous loopholes to avoid legislation forbidding e-waste shipping, such as labeling broken electronics as 'end-of-life' or 'second-hand-goods', falsely identifying them as in working order.[11][18] If it were true that between 50% and 75% of the electronics imported are unable to be salvaged and remain on the land, the import would be illegal.[8][14] However, the UN Studies have failed to find evidence of the allegation, and the only source of the dumping statistic has denied it.
Young men burning wires from auto harnesses and electronics have been the subject of several photojournal essays.[19] The workers disassemble cars, appliances, and scrap electronics, gathered in wheeled push carts from Accra neighborhoods. The revenue from the recovery of metals such as copper, aluminium and iron, is very small. Several news outlets covered the plight of the recycling workers.[11][14][20] Photographs of workers burning old wire on top of tires and plastic in order to melt the plastic, or dismantling the waste using their bare hands or stones, were documented by the press.[14] Magnets from electronics are shown used to gather the smallest of ferrous metal scraps.[8] The remaining materials were further burned or dumped nearby.[11]
The workers, children and adults alike, sell the metal scraps to earn a living.[14] A half a sack of copper or aluminium will sell for about ₵700, amounting to about ₵8‑10 Ghana cedis per day (US$4‑6).[21]
The informal e-waste recycling industry is highly hierarchical, with burners, collectors, and dismantlers, often the entry point for young people, representing the "lowest" class. Developing enough knowledge, networking, and capital can then allow people to attain higher ranks. The Greater Accra Scrap Dealers Association (GASDA), a group formed by the workers themselves, established certain rules and regulations, and even cooperated with the National Youth Authority, a governmental organization.[17]
Upwards of 85 per cent of electronics and electrical parts imported into Ghana are from the EU, and a large proportion is dumped as e-waste after entering the country. Only 35 per cent of second-hand and waste electronics in Europe end up in official recycling and collection systems.[22] The reason for that is the cost of complying with EU regulations for discarding e-waste. Avoiding those costs of compliance (mainly de-pollution), is estimated at €150 million to €600 million (US$165 million to $658 million) annually.[23]
The population of Agbogbloshie consisted of economic migrants from northern and rural parts of Ghana, where living standards are growing worse, causing people to move to urban settings, such as Agbogbloshie. Conditions may not have been significantly better, but making a living is easier, in the immediate sense.[6] Inhabitants of Agbogbloshie lived, ate, worked and relieved themselves on the land and amongst the waste.[2][6] Children who were able to attend school often spent every evening and weekend processing waste and searching for metals.[24]
Dwellings were wooden shacks that lacked water and sanitation.[7] The area was also home to armed robbers, prostitutes, drug dealers and others involved in underground markets. Crime and disease ran rampant throughout Agbogbloshie, creating an almost uninhabitable environment for humans.[6] Due to the harsh living conditions in Agbogbloshie, outsiders nicknamed the area "Sodom and Gomorrah", after the two condemned Biblical cities.[2]
The dumping and processing of electronic waste in Agbogbloshie severely contaminated the air, land, and water in the entire area. Photographs from the Agbogbloshie e-waste landfill showed scrap workers burning wires from auto harnesses and plastic-encased electronics to recover copper.[25] When the E-waste is broken down, burned and processed, toxic chemicals that are released into the ground, water and atmosphere.[11][12][20] Poisons such as lead, mercury, arsenic, dioxins, furans, and brominated flame retardants seep into the surrounding soil and water, thereby seriously polluting the landscape. Greenpeace laboratory tests showed that water and soil from areas in Agbogbloshie had concentrations of chemicals at levels over a hundred times greater than the allowable amounts.[12]
Several studies confirmed high levels of lead in the soil, with particular risks to workers and children.[26] Environmental lead contamination was predominantly due to burning the plastic covering of copper wires. PVC electrical insulation contains approximately 3000 mg/kg lead as a stiffener and ultraviolet inhibitor, and that lead is released during the burning.[27]
The contamination levels of chlorinated and brominated dioxin-related compounds (DRCs) in the soil of Agbogbloshie were among the highest so far reported from informal e-waste recycling sites. Concentrations of several other toxic equivalents regularly exceeded acceptable levels set by Japanese, German, or American governments almost three- to sevenfold.[28]
In April 2019, The Guardian reported that a study for IPEN and the Basel Action Network found dangerous levels of dioxins and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBS) in the eggs of chicken at Agbogbloshie.[29] The scientific study published by Arnika, IPEN, and CREPD revealed that eggs from backyard farming in Agbogbloshie contained very high concentrations of other persistent organic pollutants, specifically short-chain chlorinated paraffins (SCCPs), brominated dioxins (PBDD/Fs), hexachlorobenzene, and polybrominated diphenyl ethers.[30] A study published in "Emerging Contaminants" found that the chicken eggs from Agbogbloshie had the highest PCDD/F-dl-PCB-TEQ (International Toxic Equivalents) ever measured, with a value of 856 pgTEQ/g fat.[31]
Glass containing lead, used in computer monitors (CRT tubes) also contributed to elevated soil lead levels.
The Korle Lagoon, on which Agbogbloshie is situated, had extremely low levels of dissolved oxygen, a result of the large and uncontrolled quantities of domestic and industrial waste being released into the water. Studies indicated that the entrance to the lagoon was severely polluted and not suitable for primary or secondary contact, due to the large amount of bacteria present.[32]
One egg from a free-range chicken in the area was tested and found to have 220 times the amount of chlorinated dioxins (which can cause cancer and damage the immune system) that the European Food Safety Authority considers safe to consume. Because of that, nearly 80,000 inhabitants living either in or near the Agbogloshie slum were affected by the toxins in the food.[33]
Processing electronic waste presented a serious health threat to workers at Agbogbloshie. The fumes released from the burning of the plastics and metals used in electronics are composed of highly toxic chemicals and carcinogens.[11] Workers often inhaled lead, cadmium, dioxins, furans, phthalates and brominated flame retardants.[18][20]
Exposure to those fumes is especially hazardous to children, because the toxins are known to inhibit the development of the reproductive system, the nervous system, and the brain in particular.[11] In similar e-waste processing areas, with conditions and demographics like those of Agbogbloshie, 80% of the children have dangerous levels of lead in their blood.[20] Inhabitants often suffer from chronic nausea, headaches, chest and respiratory problems.[18][34]
High levels of toxins were also discovered in soil and food samples, because those chemicals stay in the food chain.[11][18]
There is evidence that, because they lack the critical education necessary, electronic waste workers possess little knowledge and awareness about the hazards associated with informal e-waste processing, and some attribute their health issues to other sources, such as malaria or exposure to the sun.[35]
E-waste presents a potential security threat to individuals and exporting countries. Hard drives that are not properly erased before the computer is disposed of can be reopened, exposing sensitive information. Credit card numbers, private financial data, account information, and records of online transactions, can be accessed by those with the necessary knowledge. Organized criminals in Ghana commonly search the drives for information to use in local scams.[2]
Government contracts were discovered on hard drives found in Agbogbloshie. Multimillion-dollar agreements from United States security institutions, such as the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the Transportation Security Administration and Homeland Security, all resurfaced in Agbogbloshie.[2][36]
The Ghanaian government has made an effort to restore the area through the "Korle Lagoon Ecological Restoration Project" (KLERP). In 2003, the OPEC Fund for International Development, the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa, and the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development provided a loan for the project, with the expectation that the Ghanaian government would dredge the lagoon and restore its surroundings.[6][7] Other goals of the project included a reduction in flooding, an increase in marine life, an improvement of water quality, and an improvement in general sanitary conditions.[37]
Due to the invasive nature of the project, those restoration efforts were disputed by the inhabitants of Agbogbloshie. The KLERP required people to leave the area, which was the only home for a majority of squatters. The Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) continually tried to evict people, but were met with a great deal of resistance.[6]
In 2014, the NGO Pure Earth (formally Blacksmith Institute) funded the creation of a Copper Wire Recycling Center within Agbogbloshie, and helped to install several automated machines to simplify the removal of plastic coating and reduce burning.[38] The efforts appeared to be moderately successful, but burning continued.
From 2017, the German government supported Ghana in introducing sustainable e-waste management.[39] The E-waste programme was implemented by Deutsche Gesellschaft für internationale Zusammenarbeit in partnership with Ghanaian Ministry of Environment Science Technology and Innovation (MESTI).[40] In March 2019, a training facility, a Ghana Health service clinic, and a football pitch, were provided.[41]
On 1 July 2021, the Ghanian Government began demolishing and clearing the Agbogbloshie settlement and recycling site.[42]
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