The writer, Prof. Alfred Oteng-Yeboah
Under the un-official and unregulated schemes, the exploitation is uncontrolled. This is the situation where individuals flout laid down rules of engagement in the exploitation of state natural resources and plunder the resources which belong to the people of the community and the country with reckless abandon, using all kinds of methods many of which are harmful to the environment and/ or destructive in their operations on natural environments, with no regard to environmental concerns or are completely oblivious of the consequences that come in the trail of their exploitation.
These activities border on degradation, pollution and disturbance of an otherwise perfectly balanced and functioning natural ecosystems that contribute to human wellbeing.
These actions consequently upset the availability of the goods and services that promote good health, good drinking water, congenial atmosphere, food and nutritional security, cultural and family cohesion and above all economic well-being and poverty reduction. This is the category that includes galamsey operators, chainsaw operators, sand and stone mining contractors. Fishers who use unapproved fishing gears and other methods such as ‘akadja’, dynamite and other chemicals, belong to this category. They exploit nature, ostensibly to enrich themselves, but end up creating ecological disasters. This is another area of worry for me.
Our beautiful country is under siege. We are witnessing an unprecedented environmental catastrophe which keeps increasing by the day and we are all just watching and doing very little to counter it. We are watching because we think it is somebody else’s business or duty to address and correct or preferably ‘right’ things. That attitude will destroy our country if it persists.
We are clearly in a crisis situation now and there must be an urgent action to deal with it immediately before it becomes completely entrenched and become the way of doing things in Ghana. I feel that something has to change. Our view of our environment must be directed properly. It is like overhauling our resource exploitation procedures to relate with current understanding of global changes.
As I write this piece, I try to peep into the future to imagine how the generation coming after us will fare when they get confronted with the environmental mess and indiscipline we are leaving behind. It does not bode well for us as a nation at all. It will be selfish on our part to assume innocence and not to recognize that it is our generation that has created this mess and therefore make it our responsibility to clean up.
The writer, Prof. Alfred Oteng-Yeboah, is a retired Professor at the Department of Plant and Environmental Biology, University of Ghana, LEGON.
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Climate Change & Energy
Ghana’s Environmental Crisis, Some Observations and Solutions (Part 1)
Source: ghenvironment.com - August 12, 2022
By Prof. Alfred Oteng-Yeboah
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