Campaign Lead of GYEM, Samuel Boadu Duah
“So one of the proposals we are making is for some single-use plastics to be banned for us to adopt other alternatives. So in this campaign, we are sensitizing market women and all those who patronize those plastics to adopt the other alternatives. The harm is too much and it affects all of us, go to the beaches that is where our plastics end up, our drains are choked when it rains, our markets and homes get flooded”, he added.
Providing alternatives to some of the single-use plastics such as polythene bags, Duah suggested the remolding of old fabrics and clothes to be used as bags or something they can carry along to the market. This alternative, he said, will be cheap to buy and can help create jobs for the teeming unemployed youth after taking them through how to remold old fabrics into bags.
As part of the sensitization durbar, some market vendors, drivers and their mates were taken through the process of remolding old fabrics into bags. In partnership with Reusable Bags GH, reusable bags were produced and shared to some of the traders.
A trader remolding a used cloth for a bag
Mrs Angelica Dandzo, Assistant Programme Office r at the EPA commended GYEM for the Single Plastic Use campaign.
She said the single-use plastics are not easily degradable causing harm to the environment.
She said the EPA has embarked on a campaign of the 4Rs which is reduce, re-use, recycle, and resale.
“So we say we should reduce the use of these plastics, we should re-use, that is going in for alternatives, recycling plastic products like turning them into pavement blocks and many other products and the resale of broken-down plastic products such as chairs, tables to plastic recycling companies that need it as raw materials”, she said.
Yaw
November 28, 2023