Wednesday 22 October 2008

Paper presented at D2DYI Youth Summit

Waste Management and Job Creation in the Niger Delta

A paper presentation at the 2nd Annual Dare 2 Dream Youth Summit held on Saturday 30th August 2008 at Posaq Conference Hall, 76A Old Airport Road, Effurun.

By E.O. Karibo, (MWMSN; MNES; MCIWM, UK)
Integrated Waste Management-West
Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Ltd (SPDC)

Introduction
I am personally delightful to be given the honour of presenting a paper on Waste Management on the occasion of the 2nd annual Dare-2-Dream Youth Summit with the theme as “Youths as agents of change”. The event is not only timely but a vehicle to the attainment of sustainable peace and livelihood in the Niger Delta. The title of my paper is “Waste Management and Job Creation in the Niger Delta”. The importance of this paper is sequel to the prevailing environmental challenges poor waste management could pose to human health and the environment. And the fact that if properly harnessed, waste could become an economic means for job creation and youth engagement for effective change agents compared to social vises that have continued to rage of society.

The focus of this discussion shall be from personal experience as “waste Manager” over the past 13-years. At the end of this paper presentation, we would have been exposed to the Effects of poor waste handling, Sound Waste Management Techniques as well as Benefits/Opportunities Waste Management could attract given the level of jobless in the Niger Delta that may have led youths into restiveness rather than productive engagement.

Definition of Waste:
The word “Waste” is a highly subjective notion. While some persons see waste as a risk to public health and the environment, some find it as a mere necessary inconvenience and nuisance- necessary because it must be generated as long as man exits in the world to carry out day-to-day activities and a nuisance in that a sight of a huge waste dump, is not only unsightly but generates offensive odour apart from its attendant environmental consequences. However, from my personal perception, I see waste as a source of income. The understanding of my perception of waste might increase the effectiveness of waste management campaigns now that you may have been informed and educated.

Effects of Waste handling:
The growing global awareness on sustainable development as well as poor implementation of relevant environmental laws/regulations and the complete absence of waste management resources/facilities within and around major urban cities in Nigeria has promoted waste in bad or negative effects. The effects of waste are dimensional depending on the type of waste. However, hazardous waste resulting from industrial activities accounts for over 70% effects to human and the environment.

Studies reveal that, over 1,500 new chemicals are invented every year and many are introduced into industrial processes. Often these chemicals find themselves in places where they are able to harm human and environment. Apart from waste from industrial processes, sewage and other special waste such as asbestos, paints, fluorescent tubes etc pose various degrees of hazards.

Dangers of poor waste management

Product

Time to Biodegrade
Product

Time to Biodegrade
Cotton Rags
1-5 months
Tin Cans
40 - 50 years
Papar
2-5 months
Aluminium Cans
80 - 100 years
Rope
3-14 months
Plastic bags
450 years
Orange Peels
6 months
Plastic 6-pack
Holder rings
450 years

Wool Socks
1-5 years
Glass bottles
1 million years
Cigarette Filters
1-12 years
Plastic bottles
1 million years
Leather shoes

25-40 years

Plastic coated paper
milk cartons
5 years


Nylon fabric

30 –40 years



Table-1: Showing possible period it could take waste to decay






Sound Waste Management techniques:
An environmentally sound management practice involves efforts geared towards managing waste from “cradle-to-grave” without leaving any footprint that could cause harm to human and the environment. Increasing amounts of difficult-to-treat or organic wastes is among the topics of major concern today globally. The logical starting point for solid waste management is to prevent waste. This involves practices and technologies that could be explored to prevent waste through Engineering-Redesign, System Modification, buy-back of Products, Materials and Containers, and Organic Material Management strategies. In the hierarchy of Waste Management, this is certainly the most preferred option. The second most preferred option in the Waste Management hierarchy would be to reduce the amount of waste available for disposal. Waste reduction or minimization aims at reducing or eliminating the generation of waste at the source in a production processes. A common example will be improving a work practice, such as reorganizing paint batches in order to reduce cleaning operations. The 3rd preffered Waste Management option is to reuse waste. This involves reusing a product for the same or a different purpose that is; use a spent plastic drum of lube oil for collection of waste. The 4th option will be to recycle waste. This involves the process of transforming materials into secondary resources for manufacturing new products. Example of which is, processing paper waste into egg crate. The 5th waste management option is to recover waste. This is the obtaining of materials/organics (by source separation or sorting out from mixed wastes) that can be reused or recycled. An example of this practice will be burning waste oil for energy recovery. The last proffered option in the Waste Management hierarchy is residue/disposal. This option involves the treatment and eventual disposal of waste after all other options may have been explored. In contending with this option however, an engineered landfill is usually required for this option.
In other words, the P-5Rs (Prevent, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, recover and Residue) remain a global principle of Waste Management. The application of these principles will result to initiatives aimed at promoting sound health and protection of the environment. It also makes good economic and business sense to adopt and apply the principles in all phase of business cycle. According to agenda 21, the agreement reached among participating nations at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, emphasized, in Chapter 21, that reducing wastes and maximizing environmentally sound waste reuse and recycling should be the first steps in waste management. The environmental, social, and economic benefits of integrating practices of waste reduction are the bases for an emerging worldwide agenda for solid waste management. And so compliance to these best practice principles is a direct compliance to the United Nation agenda to Sustainable Environmental practice.

Principles of Waste Management Practices
Fig-2: Showing hierarchy of Waste Management
Benefit/Opportunities in Waste Management:
The application of the P-5Rs principles of waste management is an economic development tool as well as an environmental tool for any growing society. It offers direct development opportunities for communities when waste is collected with skill and care. It is a well-known fact that, discarded materials are local resource that can contribute to local revenue, job creation, business expansion, and the local economic base. This can be achieved in the following ways;
Benefits arising from sound waste collection: It will cost every one of us less to develop and implement sound municipal waste collection. The gain here will be from improved sound health and environmental protection, to creation of job opportunity for waste handlers, mechanics for vehicular maintenance, sales of waste bins/trucks and sundries associated with proper handling of waste.

Availability of Waste Management facilities: Harvesting, extracting, and processing the raw materials used to manufacture new products is an energy-intensive activity. Reducing or nearly eliminating the need for these processes, therefore, achieves huge savings in energy. The availability of recycling plants, landfill sites, and energy recovery plant will not only improve our technological base but job creation for our team jobless youth. As well as research and development opportunities.


Improved recycling Initiatives: Current practice today is to see people scavenge on waste dumpsites with attendant health and safety risk to pick recyclable waste items for economic and other gains. Recycling aluminum cans, for example, saves 95 percent of the energy required to make the same amount of aluminum from its virgin source, bauxite. The amount of energy saved differs by material, but almost all recycling processes achieve significant energy savings compared to production using virgin materials. And so apart from waste to wealth gains derivable from this practice, it offers employment opportunities.

Effects on Industries: Today our dear Warri city has improves tremendously from a metal-waste-city to a metal waste-free city. This is attributed to operation of the Delta Steel plant for he recycling of metal waste. The quantum of economic and environmental benefits this industry and the likes have in our society cannot be over emphasized.

5. Effects of waste on global warming: Everyone knows that reducing waste is good for the environment because it conserves natural resources. What many people don't know is that solid waste reduction and recycling also have an impact on global climate change. The manufacture, distribution, and use of products—as well as management of the resulting waste—all result in greenhouse gas emissions. Greenhouse gases, which trap heat in the upper atmosphere, occur naturally and help create climates that sustain life on our planet. Increased concentrations of these gases can contribute to rising global temperatures, sea level changes, and other climate changes.
The 3-steps to achiving the above gains can be summerized as follows:
Step 1. Collection and Processing
After recyclables are collected at the curb or from a drop-off center, haulers take them to a materials recovery facility, where they are sorted and baled.


Step 2. Manufacturing
Once they are cleaned, separated, and baled, recyclables are remanufactured into new products. Many consumer products, such as newspapers, aluminum and steel cans, plastic containers and other plastic products, and glass bottles, are now manufactured with total or partial recycled content.
Step 3. Purchasing Recycled Products
Purchasing recycled products completes the recycling loop. By "buying recycled," governments, businesses, and individual consumers each play an important role in making the recycling process a success
Procedure for implementing the gains sound Waste Management Principles
Fig. 3: Steps to achive WM gains


Conclusion:
The application of sound Waste Management techniques can no doubt lead to Sustainable Development and job creation. As a youth seated here and listening to me;
Enough of “no Job” syndrome.
Enough of violence as a means to drive home need for government attention and development.
Enough of criminality
As change agents, we should start a local recycling program today. Your first step should be to get in touch with recycling coordinators, government officials and or authorities in your area, or communities who have information on local recycling resources and set your objectives and priorities.


We all need consensus commitment with government leading the way through providing, propagating and fostering the enabling fiscal, economic, social environments including the implementation of a favourable legal framework that will support the process. Government must be ready to provide the land for building economic waste management infrastructures. This done, we are certain that investors will be willing to take advantage of the opportunity to invest in waste management in this state and indeed, in Nigeria. There is a huge opportunity here in Delta State to create thousands of jobs, clean up our cities and create a healthy environment that will facilitate the eradication of diseases, promote good health and improve the quality of life of our people.

Thank you for the opportunity to present this paper at this forum and for listening to me.

this paper was presented at my recently concluded youth summit in Warri,Niger Delta Nigeria
Ogaga Maxwell

Youths and the Niger Delta

I believe the key to the Niger Delta problem is the strategic development of the region and also development of the youths,, we need to develop programmes that would be key in developing and changing the paradigms of the young people and this people must also think of egaging programmes targeted at value oreintation.
The values of majority of the young people in the area would not help development, we all as youths in this region must grow from the attitude of the government owes me something to what can we do to bring a lasting change to the nation.
Nigerian is ours to build
God bless Nigeria
Ogaga

Sunday 12 October 2008

Friday 10 October 2008

Navy takes delivery of new weapons …As Adekeye is pulled out
Posted To The Web: Thursday, October 09, 2008 - By PHILIP NWOSU www.onlinenigeria.com

The Nigerian Navy said it has commenced taking delivery of arms and ammunition from a foreign firm to enable it meet up its security challenges, particularly in the Niger Delta. The procurement of the arms and ammunition, according to the Navy, commenced in 2006 after discussions were concluded and agreements sealed with a Singapore company, Messrs Singapore Technologies Kinetic Limited.The revelation was made at the pulling out parade of retiring Chief of the Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Ganiyu Adekeye, but details of the type of arms and ammunition were not given.Admiral Adekeye had, during his farewell address, told officers and men of the force that after three years in the saddle as head of the Navy, the fleet of the force has gradually returned to life.At the moment, he said, the force can boast of two to three ships constantly patrolling the country’s territorial waters.“We can also flaunt our successful conduct of three chief of the naval staff annual sea inspections with large number of ships, boats and naval helicopters even for as long as a week.“We can recall the successful participation of NNS Aradu and NNS Nwamba in the Brazilian Navy’s Bi-Centenary celebrations in honour of Admiral Joaquim Marques de Lisboa, the patron of the Brazilian Navy,” he noted.The outgone chief of naval staff said time has come for the Nigerian Navy to join the league of developing nations such as Brazil, Indonesia and Pakistan, by locally constructing its own combat vessels.While challenging naval engineers and architects on the achievement of this feat, Admiral Adekeye said the construction of a 31-metre Seaward Defence Boat by the naval dockyard has put the force’s engineer in a position to prove to the world that the local construction of war ship is achievable.He said: “Under my watch, the Nigerian Navy was able to acquire some small and medium calibre weapons to boost its operatives. We also made tremendous progress in our Niger Delta operations and personnel welfare.”Admiral Adekeye was seen off by the service chiefs, with the Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Paul Dike, leading.Two retired chief of naval staff, including Vice Admiral Akin Aduwo and Vice Admiral Jubril Ayinla were on hand to receive him into retirement.

Monday 6 October 2008

WHO DOESN’T KNOW THE SOLUTION TO THE NIGER DELTA PROBLEM?

WHO DOESN’T KNOW THE SOLUTION TO THE NIGER DELTA PROBLEM?

The recent Niger Delta ministry created is a welcome development if only their activities is not on paper alone, a lot of times we have had good initiatives and directives from the Federal Government and well meaning elder statesmen but we have problem with execution or rather what I would call implementation.
I remember my education lecture in my university days at the Delta state university teaching us about various educational systems and he made a profound thought provoking systems, that there are several systems that several African countries have adopted and it worked for them, but when a system gets to Nigeria it does not work even if it works in Ghana. and he conclude it is “because people who are suppose to wake it work refuse to work it”.
One of the problems I think we have a Nigerian that have hindered development till date is that of ethnic political appointments, in the name of satisfy everybody sometimes people who are not qualified to hold positions are put in place. If we want to develop we must know that the law of the universe simple states that “square pegs should be put in square holes”.
let appointments in this new ministry be based on people who can deliver the result needed, the Niger Delta issue demands the FULL ATTENTION of the government for now and also IMMEDIATE execution of projects.
Should I be glad that they have created a new ministry of course not? Why? You may what to ask. This is not the first time they would be “creating”, we are always creating and giving BIG names with little results. I careless if a new ministry is created all I want is to see the development of the Niger Delta, I do not support violence as a way of achieving results, I read in the papers a young Niger deltan saying that the philosophies of Ghandi and co in the nonviolent struggle is applicable in the days post, that what Nigeria needs is violence, in as much as I do not ma support violence I would not blame a young man with that kind of philosophy? Why? Because our leaders not all but majority of them have succeed in creating an environment where violence is the only language they understand and listen to.
I would like to conclude thus thought by asking what will it really take ti develop the Niger Delta region are we saying that our LEADERS do not know? if they do now know, can they not ask for advice? if they cannot ask for and listen to advise then how come they are leaders? by the way how the they get their in the first way? Back to square one.

Ogaga E. Maxwell
d2dyi@yahoo.com