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General News of Wednesday, 11 July 2012

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Premix Fuel Distribution Centers Are ....

… Accidents Waiting

Presidential Candidate of the Convention People’s Party for the 2012 election, Dr Abu Sakara has attributed the recent premix fuel explosion at Axim to lack of safety standard.

Dr. Sakara, who visited the site of the explosion to see first hand the situation at ground zero, observed that three rusty tanks which were half submerged were directly next to a row of small retail sheds along a narrow road on the sea front.

Furthermore the distribution point offered no restrictions in access to the throng of people that had gathered there to receive premix fuel after a fuel tanker had discharged its contents.

Dr. Sakara commented that the rudimentary conditions under which premix fuel was being handled fell far short of safety standards for handling of inflammable petroleum products. He also noted that the unrestricted access to the distribution points made it possible for so many people to be injured and killed by the incident.

“These are accidents waiting to happen” he said, referring to similar conditions that prevail at other premix distribution points in fishing communities.

When asked what solutions he recommends to avoid such occurrences at premix duel distribution points in future: Dr. Sakara said that in the short term, the concerned government agencies must educate the distributors and fishing communities about the safe handling of petroleum products.

He added that the relevant authorities must also ensure that the distribution points meet and comply with safety basic standards. He advised that District Chief executives and Parliamentarians of fishing communities should take an active interest to support the improvement of infrastructure at premix distribution points. Dr. Sakara went on to add that medium to long term solutions were also needed to protect the livelihoods of fishing communities.

He observed that the distribution of premix fuel is an attempt to subsidize the cost of ever decreasing catches of fish with each fishing trip out to sea.

The CPP 2012 Presidential Candidate said that if nothing is done to reverse the trend of decreasing fish stock off our coastline, there will come a day when subsidized premix fuel will be useless to fisher folk, because their objective is to catch fish and not to take joy rides in the sea only to come back with empty nets!

Dr Sakara urged government to pay more serious attention to the issuing of fishing licenses for foreign fishing vessels to ensure that they are within quotas that allow our fish to be adequately replenished. He also said that the long standing inability to enforce a stop of fishing methods that dangerously deplete our fishing stock should be corrected by empowering and motivating the relevant agencies immediately. Dr Sakara also recommended that in the long term, government should support the development of fish and prawn farms in the rivers and eastuaries to provide the fisher folk alternatives that complement going out to sea. Dr. Sakara, a strong advocate for local entrepreneurship, noted that the large fish quantities taken off Africa’s coast pose a danger to food security of Africans. He noted that whilst the fish itself is going out of our food stock, it also deprives us of a valuable product, the fish gut, when fish is not processed on shore. The loss of such huge quantities of fish gut is a major contributor to our inability to supply adequate feed for our poultry industry. The processing of fish catches on-shore would create additional jobs for fisher folk and also retain our biomass of fish gut for our use.

The government of Ghana and ECOWAS must therefore be vigilant and prudent in handling negotiations such as the EPA.

“We must not commit to documents that disadvantage our long term capacity to process our own products on shore” Dr Sakara concluded.